Do Immigrants Really Take Jobs from American Workers? The Data Speaks

Diverse workers reviewing labor market data about immigration and American jobs
Workers examine employment data on immigration and U.S. job trends.

No, immigrants do not broadly take jobs from American workers in the simple one-for-one way the claim suggests. The data shows a more practical labor-market reality: immigrants compete with some workers in some jobs, but they also fill labor gaps, create demand, support businesses, and expand the economy.

If you want a useful answer, you need to separate emotion from labor-market evidence. This article breaks down what the numbers say about native-born workers, undocumented workers, wages, job categories, H-1B specialty-occupation visas, and the likely effect of cutting immigration.

Do Immigrants Really Take Jobs From American Workers?

The direct answer is no, not across the labor market as a whole. When you look at employment data from the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, foreign-born and native-born unemployment rates sit close to each other rather than showing one group driving the other out of work. That matters because a broad “job stealing” claim should show up in broad employment numbers. The current data does not show a national native-born employment collapse caused by immigrants. Learn More

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