Boston Sunday Globe

How immigrants drive New Hampshire’s economy

- By Amanda Gokee GLOBE STAFF Amanda Gokee can be reached at amanda.gokee@globe.com. Follow her @amanda_gokee.

CONCORD, N.H. — Ali Sekou is something of a trailblaze­r.

Originally from Niger, Sekou immigrated to the US in 2012. That meant some setbacks. Though he’d been a law student in Niger, in the US he had to take night classes at a high school to learn English. He put himself through community college, and then eventually earned a bachelor’s degree at Plymouth State University and a master’s degree in community developmen­t and leadership at the University of New Hampshire. His efforts paid off: In the recent municipal elections, he was elected to serve as a city councilor in Concord.

“I’m the first Black, first immigrant, first Muslim, and the youngest elected to the City Council,” he said at a conference Nov. 15 that highlighte­d the critical role immigrants play in New Hampshire’s labor market.

Sekou’s message to attendees was that immigrants have a lot to offer, if they are given a chance. He urged other immigrants to get involved in their communitie­s through local government or volunteeri­ng.

“We don’t have to live in the shadow or think that we are here just to earn money. We are here as part of the community,” said Sekou, who recently accepted a job as manager of community engagement and inclusion for the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority.

Without immigrants like Sekou, New Hampshire’s population and its economy would not be growing, other panelists noted.

Phil Sletten, research director at the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute, said that immigrants from abroad have been critical in driving population growth, which has been historical­ly linked to economic growth in the state. Data from 2010 to 2022 showed that about half the state’s growth came from internatio­nal migration during that time. Internatio­nal migration contribute­d to about 36,500 new residents, while domestic migration added about 27,100.

Sletten said the state remains dependent on people moving here in order to keep growing, since there have been more deaths than births in New Hampshire in recent years.

New Hampshire also faces the most severe workforce shortage of the past 20 years, according to data from the New Hampshire

Fiscal Policy Institute. Sletten said in the early 2000s, there was about one open job per unemployed person. But by last July, there were just under four open jobs per person. That’s ut companies in a difficult position when it comes to hiring.

“The only way the economy in New Hampshire is going to grow is if we have more immigratio­n,” said Steve Duprey, president of Foxfire Property Management and the Duprey Companies. He’s also a prominent New Hampshire Republican.

Duprey, whose company includes four hotels, said new Americans were a key part of the labor market in the hospitalit­y business. “We could not have our businesses without the new Americans,” he said.

The company partnered with the Ascentria Care Alliance, an agency that helps immigrants, to create a training program in order to place more people in jobs.

Duprey said more support is needed for new Americans, who face barriers in transporta­tion, housing, and language. He said the state should create a program so businesses could pay employees for taking language classes, and suggested legislatio­n to offer a tax credit to participat­ing businesses.

“The best way to get more new Americans here,” he said, “is to come up with state supports that we put on top of federal supports to make it a place where new Americans want to come.”

 ?? ALI SEKOU ?? “We are here as part of the community,” said Ali Sekou, elected a Concord councilor.
ALI SEKOU “We are here as part of the community,” said Ali Sekou, elected a Concord councilor.
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