Why do we have to want what Western Europe does?
Safe to assume they have a lot more practice with budgeting for things like universal healthcare, tuition-free public college, extended paid family leave, and other programs of that nature, correct?
Their guardrails for such programs are
A) keeping somewhat tight controls of their borders
B) even when people are there legally after approval, they have to live, work, and pay taxes in the country before they're eligible to participate in any of the aforementioned benefits
You don't have to control it, you just have to know what it is.
If you wish to keep benefits programs solvent and adequately funded, your choices are
Control it...or scale down the benefits so that more people can collect on them without impacting the budget.
To continue on my dinner party analogy.
If I have budgeted for steaks for 8 based on a $150 budget.
If the plan is to "let me know ahead of time that it'll be 12 people and not 8", I still have the $150 to work with, so that means people won't be getting steak, they'll be getting pizza.
Many of the current Democratic proposals both A) ask for the benefits to be upgraded, while simultaneously proposing B) policy changes that will make the headcount even larger in ways that aren't easily predictable.
Without controlling the number of people coming in, the benefits people get will be weakened, not enhanced.
And some states that have rolled the dice on the approach have had it backfire.
Illinois tried it, by both having cities offer themselves up as sanctuary cities, while simultaneously trying to fast track the process of expanding certain social benefits.
Per Politico:
Illinois offers a cautionary tale for those concerned about costs. The number of undocumented adults who have signed up for Medicaid under the state’s coverage expansions exceeded the actuarial firm Milliman’s projections, according to the Department of Healthcare and Family Services. And, according to the state’s most recent public data, between March 2022 and February 2023, the program paid nearly twice in claims for covered adults than what Milliman projected, the department said.
“There’s historically been an assumption that takeup would be slow and low” Whitener said. “But it is not playing out that way”
Point of reference, Milliman is one of the world's top actuarial firms, it's the one that the United Nations partners with (for what that's worth)...it's their job to be able to predict expenses and costs, risk management, and evaluate statistics with a somewhat high degree of confidence. Despite their best efforts, they missed the mark, by quite a bit actually, as the programs ended up paying out double what their original projections were.
That would indicate that my stance has some validity, as if you're not controlling the head count (at least to some degree), it could be nearly impossible to make accurate projections for what things are going to end up costing.