New data from the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) reveals that less than half of both legal and illegal immigrants who’ve arrived in the United States over the past two years are actually holding down a job. According to CIS, just 46 percent of the new immigrant population under Joe Biden are employed.
The CIS immigrant employment numbers, calculated with data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau, undercuts the argument used by many mass immigration proponents that the unchecked flow of immigrants is necessary to fill jobs that Americans won’t work. While immigrant labor did fuel much of the Biden government’s job growth since the octogenarian Democrat took office in 2021, it appears a cooling job market and stagnant economy has resulted in even immigrants increasingly being unable to find work.
Illegal and legal immigrant labor has distorted U.S. job numbers for several years now. The National Pulse has reported extensively on the economic and social impact the border and illegal immigration crisis have had on the average American. While cheap immigrant labor has undoubtedly had a deflationary impact, that has come chiefly through suppressing the wages of native American workers. In addition, overreliance on cheap immigrant labor can lead to industries stagnating in terms of innovation, resulting in long-term negative externalities for businesses.
Those immigrants who have been able to find work often do so through Biden — and Democrat-backed non-government organizations (NGOs) like the Tent Partnership for Refugees. Companies supplied with labor by the Ten Partnership for Refugees include RedRoof Inn, Royal Farms, Shopify, Delta Airlines, DoorDash, Etsy, and Bloomberg.
U.S. companies that employ illegal immigrants, and even more troubling, illegal child immigrants as laborers, have faced little in the way of fines under the Biden government. The National Pulse reported last week that several janitorial service companies and a vendor for Tyson Foods all faced little in terms of pushback from Biden government regulators.