In the public debates over federal immigration reform, much has
been made of the argument that undocumented immigrants would be a drain on
federal, state and local government resources if granted legal status under
reform. But it is also true that the 11.2 million undocumented immigrants
living in the United States are already taxpayers, and that their local, state
and federal tax contributions would increase under reform. This report provides
state-by-state estimates on the state and local tax contributions of the 11.2
million undocumented immigrants living in the United States.The key findings
are:Undocumented immigrants currently contribute significantly to state and
local taxes, collectively paying an estimated $10.6 billion in 2010 with
contributions ranging from less than $2 million in Montana to more than $2.2
billion in California. This means these families are likely paying about 6.4
percent on average of their income in state and local taxes. Allowing
undocumented immigrants to work in the United States legally would increase
their state and local tax contributions by an estimated $2 billion a year.
Their effective state and local tax rate would also increase to 7 percent on
average, which would put their tax contributions more in line with documented
taxpayers with similar incomes.
http://www.itep.org/immigration/?gclid=CJzxruyhvcICFYWFfgodKBMA0Q
No comments:
Post a Comment