Why Trump's efforts to keep immigrants out hurts the U.S. economy

Trump’s new immigration rule announced this week would deny green cards to people who are deemed likely to rely on welfare and require public housing and food assistance. This marks a stark departure from U.S. immigration policy which has historically favored family reunification.

“Give me your tired and your poor who can stand on their own two feet and who will not become a public charge,” said Ken Cuccinelli, Trump’s top immigration official, in a recent interview.

In spite of often being the target of divisive political rhetoric, immigrants continue to prove that they are a crucial source of talent for corporate America and a key driver of the United States’ global economic leadership. More than half of U.S. Nobel Prize winners have been immigrants over the past five years and foreign-born individuals and their children have founded about 45% of Fortune 500 companies.

President Donald Trump reacts at the end of his speech at a campaign rally, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2019, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
President Donald Trump reacts at the end of his speech at a campaign rally, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2019, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Foreign born workers only make up roughly 17% of the U.S. labor force, but they have an outsized role in specifically the types of high skilled occupations such as computer and mathematics-related jobs that are essential for long-term economic expansion and productivity growth, according to a new Goldman Sachs report by Abby Joseph Cohen and Michael Hao Wu.

Inflow of immigrants helps pay for Social Security and Medicare

As the country grapples with the challenges of funding vital programs such as Social Security, which has an $80 billion negative cash flow, and Medicare, a growing labor force is vital for generating much needed tax revenue. Many nations in the European Union, Japan, and China are facing the prospects of a shrinking labor force, but the U.S. has managed to buck this trend with the help of the inflow of immigrants.

labor force growth
Source: Goldman Sachs

Over the past ten years of U.S. economic expansion, immigrants have represented 53.9% of the growth in the labor force. By comparison, their native-born counterparts only helped the workforce grow by 11.8%. As decreasing birth rates and an aging population impact the workforce, the economic importance of the continued flow of immigrants will only grow over the coming years.

Immigrant wages

Low skilled occupations have traditionally had the highest concentration of immigrants, Cohen and Wu observed. However, the occupations benefiting from the largest increases in immigrants recently are those that require higher skills and educational attainment. Roughly 50% of doctorate degrees in math and 58% in IT and engineering were awarded to international students by American universities in 2017. Foreign-born students also earned more master’s degrees in IT (67%) and math and engineering (56%) than Americans.