The Volokh Conspiracy
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Immigration Restrictions as Affirmative Action for Natives
Cato Institute immigration policy expert Alex Nowrasteh explains the close parallels between a policy most conservatives hate, and one most them reflexively support.

Many of the people who strongly oppose the use of racial preferences for affirmative action are also strong supporters of tight immigration restrictions. Few see any contradiction between these two positions. But, as Cato Institute immigration policy scholar Alex Nowrasteh points out in a recent post, immigration restrictions are a form of affirmative action for natives. They undermine meritocracy in much the same way as racial preferences in higher education do, except much more so:
The recent Supreme Court case about affirmative action in university admissions (SFFA v. Harvard) paralleled a broader social debate over meritocracy. Those opposed to affirmative action broadly say they are supportive of meritocracy. They believe individual achievement should be more prominent in university admissions, at least when the government is involved in university funding. The debate over affirmative action and meritocracy intersects with the immigration debate in two ways. First, immigration restrictions are the most destructive form of affirmative action. Second, immigrants and their descendants have been essential in reducing the scope of affirmative action in the United States over the last 30 years….
U.S. immigration restrictions are the most anti‐meritocratic policies today, and they are intended as affirmative action for native‐born Americans…. Just peruse nativist websites, and you'll see many arguments about immigrants taking jobs from more Americans who are more deserving because of where they were born. When people think of anti‐meritocratic policies, they rightly jump to quotas, race‐based affirmative action, or class‐based affirmative action….
It's true; those are all anti‐meritocratic and likely wouldn't exist in a free market outside of a handful of organizations in the non‐profit sector. But U.S. immigration restrictions are worse. The U.S. population is about 4.2 percent of the global population. Immigration laws prevent the other 95.8 percent of the world from trying their hand in the U.S. market meritocracy.
I made a similar argument in this 2020 post:
There is disagreement about exactly what qualifies as meritocracy. But, generally speaking, meritocrats believe that important educational and economic opportunities should be distributed primarily based on some combination of skill, talent, and hard work, not based on arbitrary circumstances of birth outside students' and job applicants' control. The paradigmatic opposite of meritocracy is a system of hereditary aristocracy, in which opportunities are distributed primarily based on who your parents are…..
Today, hereditary aristocracy is widely condemned in liberal democratic societies. Even relatively limited forms of it come in for widespread criticism. For example, many point out that "legacy admissions" at elite universities are unmeritocratic, and should be rejected for that reason…. Conservatives and other critics of affirmative action for racial minorities similarly argue that an applicant's race or ethnicity are outside her control and in and of themselves tell us nothing about her merit.
But that which is widely condemned in the domestic context is equally widely accepted when it comes to migration restrictions—even though the departure from meritocracy is far greater in the latter case. Our system of immigration restrictions—and that used by most other nations—is essentially a form of hereditary aristocracy by another name….
For most people, citizenship status determines where you are allowed to live and work, which in turn largely determines not only your economic fate, but often whether you will have protection for even very minimal human rights. And citizenship itself is largely determined by birth—much like membership in old-time aristocracies. If you were not born a US citizen or a close relative of one, there is very little chance you will ever be allowed to emigrate here…..
The deviation from meritocracy here is vastly greater than those many complain about in other contexts. If you were born in Cuba, Venezuela, or Zimbabwe, and migration restrictions force you to stay there, you are highly unlikely to ever escape poverty and oppression—no matter how talented, hard-working, or otherwise meritorious you might be….
By contrast, if legacy preferences or affirmative action prevent you from getting admitted to Harvard…., there is a good chance you can still attend a selective college, often one that is just one rung down from the one that rejected you. There is still a deviation from meritocracy. But it's far smaller than in the case of migration restrictions.
Conservative meritocrats are quick to condemn affirmative action programs premised on the assumption that we need to give blacks and Hispanics a leg up against whites and Asians. But these meritocratic principles are forgotten when it comes to immigration restrictions. That happens even though the departure from meritocracy is far greater in the case of the latter. Moreover, unlike African-Americans and some other minority groups, native-born citizens can't plausibly claim they deserve affirmative action preferences in order to compensate them for historic injustices, such as slavery and segregation.
In this respect, immigration restrictions are actually more akin to legacy preferences than affirmative action for historically discriminated-against minorities. Both represent a form of privilege for the already advantaged. Even for relatively poor Americans, being born in the US and growing up here is a major advantage relative to the conditions faced by migrants who were born and raised in poor and oppressive societies.
Racial discrimination and immigration restrictions are also akin in being driven by zero-sum logic. The implicit assumption is that there is a fixed set of opportunities and the only way to benefit Group A is at the expense of B, and vice versa. Thus, for example, old-time segregationists argued that we must protect white workers against black and Asian competition. Immigration restrictionists claim that gains to immigrant workers necessarily come at the expense of natives. "Woke" leftists argue that progress for minorities depends on racial preferences in education and employment.
In a certain sense, this is true. If a black worker beats out a white one for a job, the latter loses out. Ditto if an immigrant beats out a native. But focusing on this narrow frame overlooks the ways in which opening up opportunities to more people benefits all of society, including previously advantaged groups. My co-blogger David Bernstein explained why in a 2016 post:
Virulent racists and anti-racist activists would seem to have little in common, but in fact they tend to agree on one mistaken premise: Race relations are a zero-sum game. If whites are doing well, it's at the expense of members of other races. If members of other races are doing well, it's at the expense of whites….
In fact, whites, as a group, don't benefit from discrimination against, or oppression of, other groups, except perhaps psychologically if such discrimination and oppression make them feel superior…. But from a purely economic perspective, wealth comes from gains from trade, and the wealthier your trading partners, the more wealth you can accrue….
[C]onsider as a real-world example the huge opening of economic opportunities for women in the past 50 years. Men, as a group, may have lost some psychic benefit in feeling superior to women, and one can argue about the social effects on marriage and family, but men as a group are much better off economically now that women can pursue all sorts of careers that were closed to them in the past. In pursuing careers commensurate with their talent, women make American society much wealthier, which means that men have better doctors, better products to buy, better job opportunities and so on….
The same dynamic applies, though not as obviously, when a majority imposes economic restrictions on a minority, whether through law, custom or some combination thereof. Let's say a young African American man born in 1920 had the potential to be a great scientist, but because of discrimination and racism instead wound up enmeshed in the criminal justice system. How did that benefit the majority? The majority lost whatever scientific contributions that individual could have made, was at risk of being victimized by his criminal behavior and had to use its tax money to pay for any jail time he may have served. Even if a potential scientist becomes a laborer rather than a criminal because of racism, that's still a loss to society, including to the white majority. Multiply such scenarios by millions of people, and the huge economic loss to the majority should become clear.
David's logic applies to immigration restrictions as well as to domestic gender and racial discrimination. I outlined the reasons why here. Indeed, immigration restrictions have a massive negative impact on the freedom and prosperity of native-born Americans, perhaps more so than any other federal government policy.
A few whites were still net beneficiaries of discrimination against blacks. For example, if you were a marginal white Major League Baseball player who lost his job as a result of the integration of baseball in the 1940s, it is possible that the gains of integration for you weren't enough to offset the loss of what might be a vastly better career than anything you could find elsewhere. The same goes for a modern native-born athlete who is denied a job in the NBA or the National Hockey League because of competition from immigrant players. But, on the whole, whites have benefited greatly from reductions in racial discrimination enabling minorities to access a wider range of careers, and natives from the economic contributions of immigrants.
In the last part of his post, Nowrasteh also notes that increased immigration since the 1960s has helped undermine affirmative action politically. In particular, the growing presence of Asian students in higher education has weakened traditional rationales for racial preferences. I discussed this aspect of the issue myself, here.
Ironically, conservatives who rightly condemn anti-Asian discrimination in educational institutions often embrace it when it comes to immigration. Law professor Amy Wax is a particularly egregious, but far from unique, example. Many on the left have similar double standards, in the opposite direction.
As noted in my 2020 post on immigration and meritocracy, I am not a pure meritocrat myself. My views on these issues are primarily driven by considerations of liberty, justice, and increasing human welfare. If we can become wealthier, happier and freer, by being less meritocratic, I'm willing to take that tradeoff. But when it comes to immigration, domestic racial discrimination, and legacy preferences, meritocracy and these other considerations go hand in hand. A more meritocratic society on these fronts is also likely to be freer, wealthier, and more just.
At the very least, those who value meritocracy highly should take a far dimmer view of immigration restrictions than many of them currently do. If you truly oppose hereditary privilege, you cannot exempt from scrutiny what is by far the biggest example of it in our society.
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By Somin's logic he shouldn't get paid or at least his pay should be divided up among whoever walks on to campus since his salary is affirmative action for professors.
"Somin’s logic"
What logic? You give this post way too much credence, it has to be a parody.
America is a big club and membership has its benefits.
America may be a big club but we seem to have problems deciding on membership. Is it to be exclusive with membership frozen or do we let other into the club?
Congrats, the dumbest post in the history of the Conspiracy.
Post by Prof Somin
About immigration
Invokes Affirmative Action
As we roll into Friday eve
this gonna be good!
No it wont. The post is garbage.
You can feed garbage to pigs. This post has less value.
You don't want to surrender everything you care about to satisfy a warped-beyond-recognition sense of consistency?
Leftists will name-call you then. (Spoilers: they would have name-called you anyway.)
Racists don't like posts that don't endorse racism. Film at 11.
Meritocracy ? Who defines this ? Someone with the merit to do so, or is by vote of the People, some of which may not measure up to the newly created standards ?
Professor Somin’s efforts to justify an ideology he fervently believes in leads to some extremely dubious analogies.
Do a property owner’s right to exclude employees, or an employer’s right to hire and fire, constitute affirmative action for landowners and employers?
If you believe that everyone “really” holds all property in common, and “private” property is a mere legal fiction or at most an administrative convenience, then any assertion of “ownership” at all is essentially largess, a kind of special undeserved benefit, affirmative action in favor of the owners.
If one believes that private property is an actual thing, however, this isn’t so.
Professor Somin seems to really believe that nations like the United States aren’t “real” in much the way the communist believes private property isn’t real. He believes that they are legal fictions, or at most administrative conveniences. Thus every time they they assert “rights” on behalf of their citizens against non-citizens, they are in fact receiving largesse, a kind of affirmative action, from the universal human community, which is the only real owner of right.
It is thus very understandable that Professor Somin claims that excluding non-citizens from a country constitutes “affirmative action” for citizens, just as the communist might see excluding non-owners from private property as “affirmative action” for owners.
But the non-universalist tends to find Professor Somin’s argument as dumbfounding as the non-Communist finds the Communist’s. Before making analogies that make sense only to universalists, he might want to consider how many of them might be found in his audience.
"Thus every time they they assert “rights” on behalf of their citizens against non-citizens, they are in fact receiving largesse..."
And that's the way an alien advocate for the welfare of aliens might argue. Not because it's a good argument, but because it directly supports transfer of value from residents to aliens.
But residents of a place join together in governments and other protective alliances to protect their mutual interests. One such interest is deciding which aliens may enter and reside. Residents need not value aliens or aliens' rights at all. In fact, residents have the power to place a negative value on aliens and their rights. Residents need not even listen to aliens' arguments, nor the arguments by those aliens' advocates. Why should they? Especially if those arguments are as vacuous and devoid of incentives as Somin's arguments here.
And Mr. Somin continues to make the embarrassingly ridiculous argument that jus soli citizenship is "hereditary".
If there is anything the faux libertarians who constitute this white, male, right-wing blog's target audience can't stand, it is some genuinely libertarian content.
I sense we have reached the point at which Prof. Somin couldn't redeem himself with these Republican bigots even if he started to habitually publish vile racial slurs.
There is a stark difference between discrimination on the basis of race and choosing which foreigners may enter the country.
The whole world is not entitled to equal protection from the United States.
How is that shrinking of the welfare state coming?
Can't-keep-up, backwater, conservative states such as West Virginia, Mississippi, Alaska, Kentucky, and Montana seem as parasitic as ever, relying on subsidies from better states.
Somin seems to be an open borders extremist. Nations exist. Citizenship exists. Efforts to deny the existence of nations or the importance of borders discredits our profession.
Oh, borders are important. For governments. They tell the governments the limits of where they can collect taxes.
I'm curious: Is causing somebody to strain a muscle from excessive eye rolling a legally cognizable tort?
I think maybe I've wronged Somin. I'd thought that he was oblivious to the fact that his views on immigration are so far out there that they're never, ever going to be adopted by a free country.
But after reading this, I think he may be aware of that, and so doesn't feel constrained to use arguments that would actually persuade anybody.
You hate an argument, so it's telepathy time!
Oh, give the "telepathy" thing a rest already, won't you? It's so stupid.
You speculate Somin's motives for writing do not include trying to persuade anybody. Based on I guess you not being persuaded, but like real hard.
You stop making shit up about other people's thoughts and feelings, I'll stop calling you out for it.
No, Brett, what's stupid is you thinking you understand how normal people think and reason. You're like a human trying to guess the psychology of armadillos.
Remember how "they" pick bad people who have been wronged to advocate for so that it will keep the country divided? That was a howler. Paranoid schizophrenics are laughing at your attempts to figure out how normal people think.
I mean, this is just dumb at this point.
Yes, the American government exists to provide benefits and services for American citizens (and permanent residents), and is funded by American citizens (and the permanent residents).
No conservative really disagrees with that. Is that "affirmative action" for American citizens? Sure. It's not really what that word is meant for, but sure.
I would say a lot of conservatives have a much broader vision of America than this pinched internal utility.
You don’t invoke God if you’re just talking about a mutual benefit society.
Heck, by your metrics asylum should be a policy every conservative is against for insufficiently vetted utility.
Somin very frequently cites the CATO Institiute in support of his positions. CATO is a shill organization for Big Business. It (like Somin) believes in open borders because it wants an influx of cheap labor that will drive down wages. The libertarian position is, of course, that lower costs to businesses mean lower costs to their customers, which is true, as far as it goes, but creates other societal problems. (But that is another discussion).
Here, the argument is essentially that the American government's prioritization of American citizens over non-Americans constitutes "affirmative action". This is idiocy. It would seem self-evident and unobjectionable that the American government should prioritize the needs of American citizens, as the French government should prioritize French citizens or the Nigerian government should prioritize Nigerian citizens. This is why governments exist. One might as well condemn parents for prioritizing the needs of their own children over those of other children in the world.
I don't like CATO's deal either, but I read their shit; they bring good arguments that must be refuted with more than ad hominem.
What do you think American exceptionalism is about? Exceptionally good to it's citizens? What is city on a hill about? What is the point of foreign aid to Africa?
Your vision for America is utterly inwardly focused, with everything external being purely for American benefit. That is an attitude that waxes and wanes in America. But it's not in any way widely shared right now.
You can not want open borders and yet think America has more to do in the world than exploit it.
Your posts are as clear and focused as ever. Seriously, your stream-of-consciousness approach to posting makes responding difficult, as it is usually unclear exactly what you are trying to say.
I believe the American government should prioritize the needs of Americans. Perhaps you do not. Do you understand the meaning of "prioritize"? It means to "put first". It does not mean "to the exclusion of everything else".
Somin believes anyone and everyone who wants to come to the United States should be able to. I do not. He sometimes proceeds as if the only two choices are unrestrained, unlimited immigration or zero immigration. Needless to say, there is much territory between those two extremes.
I think it would be more accurate to say that he believes that there must be a good reason to exclude someone before that person can be excluded, and that "I don't like those people" or "I don't wanna" do not constitute good reasons. And that slightly more substantive arguments — bad for the economy, etc. — are just wrong.
"Your vision for America is utterly inwardly focused, with everything external being purely for American benefit. That is an attitude that waxes and wanes in America. But it’s not in any way widely shared right now.
You can not want open borders and yet think America has more to do in the world than exploit it."
The US government only concern should be what is best for us. The rest of the world can go happily fuck off.
And I do not want open borders nor do I want America involved with much of anything globally. Leave the UN. Leave NATO. Dump Ukraine. They are not our problems and all we are doing is keeping corrupt groups up and running. I want the opposite of us exploiting the world. I want us to sit back and watch the world destroy itself. That is not us exploiting anything. It is us not preventing others from making massive mistakes.
The US government only concern should be what is best for us. The rest of the world can go happily fuck off.
You sound like one of those advocating we stay out of WW2. Defensive crouch fortress America nationalism has been pretty unpopular since Ike beat Taft in 1952.
And Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Ukraine have been such terrific usages of our lives and fortune.
There is no "CATO Institute" in the first place; it's the Cato institute. It's a reference to a person, not an acronym.
And of course Cato is a libertarian organization. Economic leftists (and this includes MAGA these days; it's often hard to find daylight between Josh Hawley and Elizabeth Warren) often are unable to tell the difference between advocating for free markets and advocating for business.
Open borders is not free market. It is as big a gift to big business as humanly possible.
People on the Left always did and always will love their slaves.
Open borders is 100% free market. A market for labor is no less a market than a market for sugar or microchips or pharmaceuticals.
Nope. It's a way to insure that the market is ALWAYS on the side of employers and NEVER on the side of employees.
Making it a non-free market by default.
We need big laws and highly staffed agencies to ensure the market stays *free*!
Glad you're coming around to my liberal side of the street!
"The government not being protectionist makes the market less free!", says someone with more animus than sense.
Except it IS protectionist. Licensing requirements and all. Either drop ALL of them, including for such things as medicine and law, or admit that the market is far from free.
It seems to me your comment rests on the assumption that having less restrictive immigration laws would necessarily be bad for current citizens. That is the assumption that Prof. Somin has been arguing is incorrect in many many posts. He may be right or he may be wrong, but you cannot refute his argument in a convincing way by just assuming he's wrong, and going from there.
American citizens made it here before others (Indians are also citizens) and are the first (in terms of the regime which now controls the country). But according to Ilya they deserve no special privileges so why should he?
He’s the one implying anyone coming in gets treated the same for his own job. So everybody walking into George mason who applies for it should be hired as a professor and pay should be divided equally. But if anyone complains about it is antimeritocratic according to his logic.
As for merit. Yes if we could implement a fair intelligence test for citizens AND incoming immigrants that would give additional privileges I wouldn’t be averse to hearing it out. But I doubt somin would want an intelligence test for illegals as much as he talks about merit.
My argument is that is utter nonsense.
If Prof. Wax believes that (1) Asians vote disproportionately Democrat, and (2) Democrats are ruining the country, why shouldn't she argue the obvious conclusion -- that we should limit Asian immigration -- regardless of her personal background? This (your comment) is like saying Clarence Thomas shouldn't argue against Affirmative Action.
"because Asians vote disproportionately Democrat"
Perhaps Democrats themselves will chip in to solve this particular problem.
And since anyone can apply for residency in this country that means they are all treated equally.
Ilya wants open borders and opposes restrictions. Pretty sure a resume and interview and a hiring committee hemming and hawing is a pretty big restriction.
I'm sure there are plenty of illegals who are as intelligent as Somin in his field. They have approximately no shot at a job there.
Easy to support a policy that has zero impact on you.
Deal other the post not other stuff not in the post.
I love how committed to the bit, no matter how stupid it makes you look, you are. Hint: there are a fixed number of professor spots (or admissions spots for college applicants). There are not a fixed number of immigration spots.
They cannot, at least not in any meaningful way.
US immigration law is horribly broken. A crack addicted criminal can often stay if he arrives illegally. A STEM PhD with a job waiting for him and a clean record cannot come.
We should fix this. It should be easy for people who add value to come to America. Those who abuse or hospitality should be rapidly and surely deported.
That said, open borders would be a disaster. The world's poor and sick would flood in. We would have to help them unless we are willing to step over their dying bodies in our streets and deal with the poor who prey on others out of hunger and desperation.
We need better immigration policy and more better immigrants but not open borders.
If you think government doesn't own 'your' land, try not paying your rent for a while.
"people who add value"
Let me stop you right there.