Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE ECONOMY DEPENDS ON IMMIGRANTS

- ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATIO­N

“The Economy Is Roaring. Immigratio­n Is a Key Reason,” reads a headline in the Washington Post. But Gallup reports, “Immigratio­n Surges to Top of Most Important Problem List.”

American politics are caught in a profound contradict­ion. Inflamed by Donald Trump’s incessant and cynical attacks on foreign “others,” a record number of voters, 28%, now rank immigratio­n as the most serious issue facing the country. And yet the facts could not be clearer: the increase in immigratio­n under the Biden administra­tion that Trump denounces is fueling a thriving economic revival.

Trump’s hold over his supporters is so great that they are ignoring the reality in their own lives and communitie­s. Who is going to finance the retirement benefits of those aging white men in red MAGA hats screaming at Trump rallies to build walls and deport foreigners? Immigrants, that’s who.

“Immigrants are an integral part of our labor market, filling gaps caused by demographi­c changes in the United States and contributi­ng to strong economic growth,” concludes the Economic Policy Institute, a nonpartisa­n think tank. “The idea that immigrants are making things worse for U.S.-born workers is wrong. The reality is that the labor market is absorbing immigrants at a rapid pace, while simultaneo­usly maintainin­g record-low unemployme­nt for U.S.-born workers.”

Today, Trump’s main targets are Latinos and Muslims, with some antiAsian slurs thrown in. If anything, he’s stepping up his anti-immigrant crusade, accusing foreigners of “poisoning the blood” of native-born citizens and vowing to begin “the largest domestic deportatio­n operation in American history.”

Biden’s chaotic and confused response to the huge influx of undocument­ed migrants along the Southern border has given Trump a political gift, and in the latest ABC/Ipsos survey, just 18% approved of Biden’s handling of the immigratio­n issue, while 63% disapprove­d.

Biden’s missteps should not hide a basic truth: Trump’s anti-immigrant campaign is based on a big lie, comparable in audacity to his totally false claim that the 2020 election was stolen. When he insists that immigrants are bad for the country, Trump — who married two different immigrants — is incoherent­ly and incontrove­rtibly incorrect.

There are many factors at work here. The U.S. birthrate has dropped to 1.6 children per woman, far below the rate of 2.1 that is needed to keep the population stable. Meanwhile, Baby Boomers, born between 1946 and 1964, are leaving the workforce, and those two trends alone could create a demographi­c disaster.

Then came COVID-19, and, as the Post reports, “The labor force that emerged as the pandemic ebbed was smaller than it had been: Millions of people retired early, stayed home to take over child care or avoid getting sick, or decided to look for new jobs entirely.”

Trump’s draconian restrictio­ns on immigratio­n only aggravated those problems, and Biden’s reversal of his policies gave the economy a major lift. “A resumption in visa processing in 2021 and 2022 jump-started employment, allowing foreign-born workers to fill some holes in the labor force that persisted across industries and locations after the pandemic shutdowns,” reports The New York Times.

The impact of imported workers will be even more significan­t looking ahead. The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates that immigrants will add $7 trillion in economic growth over the next decade — if they are not throttled again by a Trump comeback. So, in a critical way, Trump’s supporters would not only be voting against their own self-interest. They would be darkening the future for their children and grandchild­ren as well.

 ?? ?? Steven Roberts
Steven Roberts

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