The post-COVID job “recovery” touted by Joe Biden has been driven almost entirely by the flow of foreign workers into the American labor force, according to a new study from the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS). The immigration policy group found that the figure of 2.7 million ‘additional’ individuals joining the workforce in the fourth quarter of 2023 came about because of an increase of 2.9 million legal or illegal immigrant jobs and a decline of 183,000 native-born American jobs.
Since the economic recovery began in late 2020, the number of U.S.-born workers entering the labor market has yet to return to pre-pandemic levels. Despite the sluggish job recovery among native workers, the U.S. experienced a hot job market — driven by a flood of cheap, foreign labor, the CIS study shows. Immigrant labor recovery has far outpaced native-born recovery when comparing fourth-quarter numbers at the end of each year since 2020.
The National Pulse previously reported that the influx of legal and illegal immigrants has likely had a ‘cooling’ effect on inflation by depressing wages across the county. The downward wage pressure creates a degree of ‘demand destruction’ — and declining demand should correlate to falling prices.
The influx of immigrant labor has also likely fueled negative perceptions about the economy for groups of native-born Americans being displaced in the job market. Recently Van Jones, who served in the Obama government, slammed President Joe Biden, saying the jobs he’s made available to the Black community are “crappy.”
Competing with cheap, immigrant labor can be difficult for native-born Americans regardless of whether the job is blue-collar or white-collar. A look at salaries for H1B visa holders working in technology versus the industry average shows a significant difference in compensation — with the gap sometimes being ten thousand dollars or more.