<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/20/opinion/20sun3.html?th=&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

March 20, 2005
EDITORIAL OBSERVER

An Immigration Experiment Worth Watching in Spain
 By DAVID C. UNGER


adrid - As so much of the Western world debates imposing tighter
restrictions on immigration, it's a good time to take a look at Spain.

The year-old Socialist government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero is moving
in the opposite direction, toward a more enlightened system that aims to
reduce the number of illegal foreigners by simplifying the path to legal
recognition. It is too soon to know how well Spain's new approach will work
or if it is even possible for one country in an increasingly borderless
Europe to chart a distinctive course. But if Madrid's experiment is a
success, it could become a model for other countries struggling to balance
the need for additional labor with fears that terrorists could hide their
tracks among large communities of foreign workers forced to live outside
the legal system.

The new Spanish policies largely reflect the thinking of Consuelo Rumi, the
government's state secretary for immigration. As a symbol of the new
approach, Ms. Rumi's offices have been moved out of the Interior Ministry,
whose main business is policing, and are now housed in the Ministry of
Labor and Social Affairs. Enforcement is still a priority: electronic
barriers are being built along Spanish coastlines and new bilateral
agreements have been reached so that foreigners who do not qualify for
legal residence are swiftly returned to their home countries. What is
different is that the large and rapidly expanding flow of foreigners into
Spain is now frankly recognized as an economic phenomenon which can and
should be coordinated with the labor needs of Spanish employers.

 Although Spain's overall unemployment rate hovers above 10 percent, the
economy is desperately short of people willing to do some of the manual
jobs Spaniards shun, for example in construction and agriculture. There are
plenty of willing workers available to fill these jobs from North and
Central Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. Its open borders with
France and Portugal and the proximity of impoverished nations in North
Africa - Morocco is only nine miles away at the closest point - make Spain
an attractive destination for foreign workers, legal and illegal. Of the
estimated 2.7 million foreigners now in Spain, 1 million are believed to be
there illegally, more than three times as many as in 2001. That increase
testifies to the failure of the previous government's policies, which were
characterized by an overreliance on police sweeps and deportations.

 The more sophisticated approach now being tested rests on the sound
premise that by regulating and smoothing the process of legal labor
migration, illegal migration can be more effectively monitored and
controlled. As a first step toward drawing foreigners out of the
underground economy, the government is currently offering legal residency
papers to people with no criminal record and a six-month labor contract in
hand from an employer. After this amnesty expires in May, workers who fail
to qualify will be deported, while those who employ them will face fines of
more than $80,000 per illegal employee.

 Bringing eligible foreign workers into legal daylight makes it easier for
the authorities to keep track of their employment status and their
whereabouts. Making sure they are paid on the books and with appropriate
social insurance contributions deducted should make their presence more
acceptable to Spanish public opinion.

 Spain, like the United States and most Western countries, recognizes that
people facing ethnic or political persecution in their home countries have
a right to apply for refugee status. More unusually for Europe, Madrid is
also opening a small door toward the kind of skills-based immigration
offered by countries like Canada. Under an experimental system, highly
qualified immigrants without labor contracts will be permitted to live
legally in Spain for a limited period while they seek work. And recognizing
that the trade, foreign and development policies of wealthier countries
sometimes inadvertently contribute to the tide of desperate economic
migrants by destroying third world agriculture and jobs, Ms. Rumi meets
regularly with Spanish officials working in other ministries to try to
achieve better policy coordination.

 In immigration, as in other areas of government, grand strategies often
have unintended and unwanted consequences. But if the new Spanish policies
do manage to achieve their ambitious aims, they could help set a positive
precedent on a continent that has always been uneasy about welcoming
foreigners and where xenophobic populism is a mounting political danger.

 Copyright 2
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The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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