Immigration and Deportation

The focus of this and past presidencies has been on immigration legal and illegal. The influx of unestablished legal immigrants has been higher than normal. Past presidents have talked to it and taken action. It was not till this presidency that a more personal look by this president has taken the forefront. He deficiently does not like immigrants and has focused the government effort to remove them to the point of infringing upon the rights of citizens who may look like illegal immigrants. It is a forced invasion of the rights of an individual with little or “no” recourse.

Immigration has been good for America. Mass deportation will be a disaster.

So the first thing I should say in this post is that human rights and the rule of law are by far the most important things at stake right now. Having the secret police — because that’s what ICE has become — assault and kidnap people, accuse them of trumped-up crimes, hold them incommunicado from legal representation and their families, and fail to give them proper medical care or food is a lot more important than the impact of these actions on GDP. Trump seeks to dehumanize immigrants, by calling them rapists, murderers and thieves. Yet, in fact, immigrants are on average more law-abiding than native-born Americans.

But economic issues matter too. Stephen Miller and his ilk claim that immigrants have inflicted massive economic damage, so it’s important to understand both the economic effects of past immigration and the likely effects of mass deportation and/or imprisonment. I include imprisonment because it looks increasingly likely that many of the people seized by ICE, rather than being sent out of the United States, will be incarcerated in inhumane facilities like Florida’s “Alligator Alcatraz.”

Today’s primer is therefore about the economics of immigration. In it I’ll provide evidence that overall economic effects of immigration have been generally positive. I’ll also discuss the one area that is somewhat up for debate — the impact of immigration on the wages of less-educated native-born citizens. There is, however, no ambiguity about the effects of Trump’s mass deportations, which will have a devastating economic effect.

Beyond the paywall, I’ll address the following topics:

1. Immigrants in the labor force

2. Immigration, growth and inflation

3. The fiscal effects of immigration

4. The effects of immigration on wages (a somewhat contentious topic)

Immigrants in the labor force

The foreign-born share of the U.S. population has been rising gradually for decades, but there was a big surge in immigration in the aftermath of Covid:

In case you’re wondering, these numbers come from a survey that has historically protected the information of respondents and should in principle cover undocumented as well as legal immigrants. That said, all such estimates should be taken with a grain of salt. But the general facts are clear.

Most new immigrants are working-age adults, who do in fact work after arriving. Total U.S. employment rose by 3.8 million from 2019, just before Covid, until last year. How much of that employment growth was accounted for by immigration? Basically, all of it. Here’s employment growth between 2019 and 2024, in thousands:

Why do I choose that specific time period? Because 2019 and 2024 were years of more or less full employment, and by comparing those two years I skip over the disruptions associated with Covid and the subsequent rebound. So this comparison, I’d argue, gives a good picture of underlying trends. And the underlying trend is that almost all growth in the U.S. labor force has come from immigration.

Some people look at a chart like this and infer that immigrants have been driving native-born Americans out of the work force. But we know that isn’t right, because unemployment among the native-born was historically low in both years:

What we’re seeing, instead, is the baby boomer cohort reaching retirement age. As a result, the working-age native-born population in the United States has stopped growing. Most immigrants, by contrast, are working age. So immigrants have accounted for almost the entire rise in overall employment over the past five years. Without immigration since 2019, U.S. employment would barely have increased, and total employment would be more than 2 percent lower than it is.

If you want a picture of what’s happening, consider that one of the first big strains from Trump’s anti-immigrant policies has been a staffing crisis in nursing homes, which rely heavily on immigrant caregivers.

How has this immigration-led rise in employment affected the economy’s performance? And what will be the effect be if, as now seems likely, immigration will be drastically reversed or even go into reverse in the years ahead?

Immigration, growth and inflation

By definition, real GDP — the economy’s total output — equals the number of workers multiplied by average output per worker:

Real GDP = Total employment * Average real GDP per worker

Can we just take this formula and infer that immigration has increased GDP by the same percent that it has expanded the labor force? Not quite.

In principle, productivity — average real GDP per worker — could either rise or fall as a result of immigration. There are four factors to consider:

(a) An increasing labor force can become less productive on average due to diminishing returns if physical capital — buildings including housing and machinery — don’t rise in proportion

(b) Immigrants, especially undocumented immigrants, are on average less educated than native-born workers. This might tend to make them less productive

(c) In contrast to (b), immigrants can raise productivity if they bring a mix of skills that is different from and complementary to that of native-born workers

(d) Finally, there’s a selection effect: people who choose to migrate may be more motivated and driven than those who don’t. As a result, they may be especially productive

In principle, the net effect of these factors is unclear. What the data tell us, however, is that overall productivity growth since the immigration surge began — ignoring the spurious wiggles caused by the rise and fall of Covid — has, if anything, been somewhat higher than the pre-surge trend:

So it’s reasonable to conclude that the 2020s surge in immigration, which increased the labor force by about 2 percent, also increased real GDP by about 2 percent relative to what it would have been otherwise.

What happens when we bring immigration to a halt, and put it into reverse with deportations?

In point (c) above I noted that immigration can raise productivity if immigrants bring a set of skills that is different to and complementary to those of the native born. And they do. The evidence for his is that employment of immigrants, and especially undocumented immigrants, is highly concentrated in a few occupations and industries. Here’s the share of the undocumented work force, legal immigrants, and native-born workers in a variety of occupations:

In other words, mass deportations will probably have a significant effect in raising inflation.

Fiscal effects of immigration

How does immigration affect government budgets? It’s important to distinguish between state and local governments, on one side, and the federal government, on the other.

At the state and local level the fiscal impact of immigration is ambiguous. Immigrants pay taxes and in general expand local economies, which increases revenues. On the other hand, immigrants directly or indirectly increase the demand for public services. In particular, their children attend public schools.

Overall, the effect of immigration on state and local budgets could go either way, and the net effect probably isn’t large.

At the federal level, however, there’s no ambiguity: Immigration is enormously helpful for the budget. Why? The federal government mainly collects taxes on working-age adults, while its nondefense spending is largely on the elderly. This is obviously true for Social Security and Medicare, which are explicitly programs for retirees. It also turns out to be true for Medicaid: while most Medicaid beneficiaries are relatively young, most of the spending  goes to the elderly or disabled, who tend to have much more expensive health conditions. In addition, Medicaid pays for much nursing-home care.

This reality is the reason declining fertility, which has left us with a growing senior population but a stagnant working-age native-born population, has led to significant problems for long-term federal finances.

Clearly, immigration mitigates those problems: An influx of working-age immigrants increases federal revenue while having little impact on federal expenses because they aren’t drawing on Social Security or Medicare, and only minimally on Medicaid. Granted, today’s immigrants will eventually collect benefits themselves if they have or eventually acquire legal residency. But they won’t collect benefits for decades, and some may never collect benefits at all.

Alert readers will already have noticed that the “low-immigration” scenario here involves far more immigration than the Trump administration wants — their goal is to have a net outflow of foreign-born residents. If they get their wish, Social Security and other social insurance programs, already under financial strain, will be in very dire straits.

Two more points about the fiscal impact of immigration. First, aside from retirement and healthcare, the federal government’s biggest expense is defense. Whatever you think we need to spend on defense, that burden is easier to bear, the bigger our domestic economy. Immigration contributes to economic growth, and therefore to our ability to project military power.

Second, we currently have large federal debt by historical standards — comparable, as a percent of GDP, to debt at the end of World War II. How did we pay off that debt? We didn’t, we just grew out of it: Federal debt in dollar terms was about the same when John F. Kennedy took office as it has been at the end of the war, but growth and inflation had reduced debt as a share of GDP from 120 to 50 percent. The point now is that ending immigration, and hence reducing future growth, will reduce our ability to grow our way out of today’s debt.

Immigration, then, has a clearly positive effect on the nation’s finances, and anti-immigration policies will do a lot of fiscal harm. There is, however, one area in which critics of immigration have a legitimate case to argue, although they’re probably wrong: the impact of immigrants on wages.

Immigration and wages

The foreign-born share of the U.S. population hit a low point in 1970, then began rising rapidly. Economic inequality in America also began rising, although a bit later, starting circa 1980, with real wages for many less-educated workers either declining or at best rising much more slowly than they had in the generation following World War II.

It was and is natural to ask whether immigration has hurt native-born workers. And there are two widely told stories to that effect. One story is ignorant and flatly wrong. Naturally, that’s the story believed by Trump officials. The other is much more sophisticated, and I myself took it seriously 30 years ago. So it’s important to understand how an accumulation of evidence has changed my mind and those of many but not all other economists.

Let’s start with the stupid. People like Trump and Miller often assert that immigrants are taking away jobs that should be going to native-born citizens. In effect, they’re saying that if foreign-born employment hadn’t increased between 2019 and 2024, the U.S. economy would have found 3.4 million native-born workers to take their place.

OK, there’s a much more sophisticated and defensible story about how immigration could be hurting some  native-born workers. It goes like this: During the 1980s and the 1990s there was a significant rise in the wage premium associated with education. For example, workers with college degrees experienced larger wage increases than workers without those degrees. At the same time, the United States was experiencing large inflows of foreign workers with relatively little formal education. So it seemed plausible to argue that immigrants were making less-educated labor more abundant and hence driving down blue-collar wages.

We saw that reality in the chart above comparing the very different occupations of undocumented immigrants, legal immigrants and native-born workers.

If immigrants aren’t competing head-to-head with native-born workers, they can’t be driving those workers’ wages down. And in that case the last coherent argument that immigrants are causing economic harm goes away.

In fact, for the most part immigrants are complements to native-born workers, raising our standard of living by providing nursing home care, harvesting crops, doing crucial construction work, and more. The great majority of native-born workers will be hurt, not helped, by mass deportations.

In summary:

1. Immigration has been the main source of labor force growth in recent years

2. Immigration has led to faster economic growth

3. Mass deportation will slow the economy while causing inflation

4. Immigration has been a big help to our fiscal situation, while deportation will make it worse

5. The evidence doesn’t support claims that immigration has reduced wages for the native-born

As I said at the beginning, the most important reasons to oppose Trump’s attack on immigrants are the violations of human rights and rule of law.

But his actions are terrible economics too.