Houston Chronicle

Boost legal immigratio­n to fix labor concerns

- By Jose Ivan Rodriguez-Sanchez Jose Ivan Rodriguez-Sanchez is a research scholar of economics at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. He receives funding from the Charles Koch Foundation. This piece was first published by the Conversati­on.

With Americans having fewer children and the nation’s labor force getting older, many employers in manufactur­ing, aviation and other industries are having trouble finding enough workers.

The gap between the demand for labor and its supply was already forming in 2017. By 2018, the U.S. economy had increasing­ly more job openings than unemployed workers. That gap has widened during the COVID-19 pandemic as more people have died, retired early or simply dropped out of the job market.

By July 2022, as the pandemic’s effects on the workplace were easing, the U.S. had 11.2 million job openings but only 5.7 million unemployed workers who might fill them.

I’m a scholar of immigratio­n and economics who researches a trend that’s driving labor shortages: declining numbers of immigrants allowed to legally work in the U.S.

When I study these numbers, I see an important opportunit­y to resolve labor shortages that are wreaking economic havoc.

Work visas

An estimated 45 million people living in the United States, roughly 14 percent of the population, were born elsewhere. About 1 in 6 U.S. workers is an immigrant.

Some of these foreign-born workers are legally employed on a temporary basis with an array of visas that make it possible to obtain jobs that run the gamut from software designers to apple pickers.

In some cases, these employees can obtain legal permanent residency — often called “a green card.” Some temporary work visas last longer than 12 months, so the number of workers with authorizat­ion is higher than the number of visas issued in that year.

H-1B visas, which require a high level of education for fields like computer programmin­g, last three years and can be renewed for another three.

The government issued a record 813,330 temporary employment-based visas in 2019. The total fell by about a third to 566,000 in 2020, as the COVID-19 pandemic got underway, and the numbers were basically flat in 2021 at 566,001 — the first year of Joe Biden’s presidency.

Of course it’s important that the government not issue visas in such a way that foreign workers depress wages or lead to the dismissal of gainfully employed Americans.

These lower wages could occur in the short run, but most empirical studies show there are long-term benefits in terms of what native-born people earn when immigratio­n rises.

A bite out of the economy

The sharp reduction in the number of temporary visas for foreign-born workers in 2020 and 2021 harmed the U.S. economy. Based on my own calculatio­ns, the total cost was around 0.4 percent per year of total gross domestic product — at least $82 billion per year in 2020 and 2021.

Immigratio­n restrictio­ns affected far more people, however, including those who were unable to obtain a green card because of the closure of embassies and consulates.

All told, these policies resulted in an estimated 2 million fewer working-age immigrants in the U.S. in 2020 and 2021.

Including those additional losses nearly triples the economic cost of U.S. immigratio­n restrictio­ns to about 1.1 percent per year of U.S. GDP.

Unless the U.S. reverses course and issues more workrelate­d visas, I estimate that the worker shortage will double to over 4 million by 2030. My calculatio­ns also suggest this will shave about 4.3 percent off of GDP, on average, annually for the next eight years. Adding that all up, that would amount to about $9 trillion in lost economic output.

Labor shortages

Labor shortages are especially severe today in certain industries that rely heavily on immigrants as employees.

For example, in 2020 foreign-born workers accounted for 39 percent of the farming, fishing and forestry workforce, 30 percent of all people employed in constructi­on and extraction, 26 percent of everyone working in computer science and mathematic­s and 22 percent in health care support.

As a result, these industries are facing unpreceden­ted challenges in trying to find workers to fill open jobs.

If these labor shortages continue, I’m certain that they will keep hurting job markets, supply chains and productivi­ty as companies have to pay their employees more and then increase prices due in part to those higher labor costs.

The labor force participat­ion rate, which measures the number of people in the job market as a percentage of the total working-age population, has been hovering around the lowest levels seen since the 1970s as more U.S. workers drop out of the job market.

After plunging to 60 percent in 2020, it bounced back partially. The rate stood at 62.2 percent in July.

Feasible fix

Of course, there are other factors besides a lack of foreign-born visas issued that are responsibl­e for the shortage of workers.

But none are easy to resolve. It’s hard for the government to increase the share of adults who are working, and there’s little that can be done in the short term about the country’s aging workforce — the result of a long-term fertility decline.

Even if the political hurdles can be high, I believe boosting the number of immigrants allowed to legally work in the United States is an important way that the authoritie­s can ease labor shortages.

 ?? Jerry Lara/Staff file photo ?? Samuel Monsivais, 53, is serenaded by Mariachi Sol y Luna after his citizenshi­p ceremony on May 13 in San Antonio.
Jerry Lara/Staff file photo Samuel Monsivais, 53, is serenaded by Mariachi Sol y Luna after his citizenshi­p ceremony on May 13 in San Antonio.

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