New York Post

Who Built America?

No, Mr. President, it wasn’t illegal immigrants

- Rich lowry Twitter@ RichLowry

JOE Biden doesn’t have a problem with illegal immigrants. He’s made that clear in his shame-faced retreat from his impromptu use of the term “illegal” during his State of the Union address.

He regrets using the offending word, doesn’t want to disrespect illegal immigrants and believes that they are absolutely essential to the success of the United States.

“Look, they built the country,” the president told Jonathan Capehart of MSNBC. He added that they are “the reason our economy is growing.”

Yes, where would America be without the essential contributi­on made to its economic vigor by desperate people crossing the border in violation of our laws?

This is all very revealing. Biden certainly sounds more like a president who has had a largely open border rather than one who, as he’s been insisting lately, wants to shut down the border if only Republican­s will pass the legislatio­n he wants.

Why, if Biden’s correct, would we deny ourselves the benefits of illegal labor?

It’s true that illegal immigrants overwhelmi­ngly work once they get here; it’s why they come in the first place, after all.

But the idea that a fraction of all immigrants, whose numbers have only drasticall­y increased the past couple of decades, “built the country” is a ridiculous fabricatio­n and a profound insult to American workers, past and present.

Prior to today, the highest percentage of all the foreign-born in the US population was 14.8%, around the turn of the 20th century.

Roughly one out of seven people obviously weren’t responsibl­e for the constructi­on of America.

As for illegal immigrants specifical­ly, they didn’t constitute the majority of any job category in America as of 2018.

Even constructi­on workers — involved in the literal building of the country’s physical plant — were 65% native-born.

Biden is exaggerati­ng, too, when he suggests the economy is growing only because of illegal immigrants.

But it is true that legal and illegal immigrants have made an outsized contributi­on to recent economic growth.

According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which aren’t flawless but capture the big picture, the total number of employed people in the United States increased by 2.3 million between February 2020 and February 2024.

Over those four years, the foreign-born employment level increased by 3.3 million, whereas the level of native-born employment is still down by a million.

Steve Camarota of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies estimates that roughly half of those immigrant jobs are going to illegal immigrants.

Needless to say, this isn’t the political bragging point that Biden might think.

“Bidenomics — it’s been great for immigrants regardless of legal status” is not a slogan the president should want to use in a campaign against Donald Trump.

To attribute our economic growth to immigrants is to ignore the contributi­ons of the 85% of the country that is native-born, and all its work, investment and spending.

The deeper problem is how the surge in immigrant labor coincides with a decline labor-force participat­ion among low-skilled Americans facing direct competitio­n from the foreign born.

A report by Camarota notes that the labor-force participat­ion rate of native-born men without a bachelor’s degree is 75.6%, still lower than the pre-pandemic level of 76.3% in the fourth quarter of 2019, and lower than in 2006 (80.5%) and 2000 (82.6%).

Constantly adding less-skilled immigrant workers to the labor force may increase overall GDP, but it doesn’t make the United States wealthier on a per capita basis, the more important metric.

According to a Congressio­nal Budget Office analysis, greater levels of immigratio­n will increase GDP “by an average of 0.2 percentage points a year from 2024 to 2034, leaving real GDP roughly 2 percent larger in 2034 than it would be otherwise.” On the other hand, real GDP per person “would be 0.8 percent smaller.”

Biden gives no indication that he sees such trade-offs. Who’d want fewer of the migrants “building our country” when we can have ever more?

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