Business and the Workforce

Business and the Workforce

Immigrants not only bring diverse skills and perspectives to the U.S. workforce, they often fill employment gaps in crucial fields. We advocate for expanded work visas and related programs so our labor force can continue to benefit from immigrant workers and remain competitive in the global economy

A Career Economist Makes the Case for Immigrants

A Career Economist Makes the Case for Immigrants

Economist Ann Markusen has spent three decades studying what makes the U.S. economy tick. And a recent teaching post in Canada re-affirmed her view that a welcome approach to immigrants is good for a nation’s bottom line. “Canada’s liberal immigration policies and the nonprofit sector’s efforts to find housing… Read More

An Open Letter from 1,470 Economists on Immigration

An Open Letter from 1,470 Economists on Immigration

p.article__date { display:none; } Dear Mr. President, Majority Leader McConnell, Minority Leader Schumer, Speaker Ryan, and Minority Leader Pelosi: The undersigned economists represent a broad swath of political and economic views. Among us are Republicans and Democrats alike. Some of us favor free markets while others have championed… Read More

Smuggled Across the Border, Mexican Entrepreneur a Testament to Hard Work

Smuggled Across the Border, Mexican Entrepreneur a Testament to Hard Work

When Jorge Peralta was 9 years old, his mother flew him and his brother from Peru to Mexico, bundled them into the back of someone’s car in Tijuana, and told them to pretend to be asleep. Peralta remembers a border officer shining a flashlight in his face before waving the… Read More

Travel Site Founder: America Must Remain Place People ‘Aspire to Come to’

Travel Site Founder: America Must Remain Place People ‘Aspire to Come to’

For Ahmed Bhuiyan, starting YourTripGuru, an online travel-planning site, was just the latest of his adventures since moving to the Bronx from Bangladesh at the age of 8. The startup also makes him part of a proud tradition of U.S. immigrants. In the United States, immigrants are… Read More

H-1B Annual Cap Reached in First Week for Fifth Consecutive Year

H-1B Annual Cap Reached in First Week for Fifth Consecutive Year

U.S. employers are vying for the chance to hire skilled foreign workers, but once again, the annual H-1B cap has been reached within five business days. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services began accepting H-1B petitions on April 3, 2017 and, on April 7, USCIS announced that it had… Read More

Think Policy Not Politics for Smart Immigration Reform, Says Professor

Think Policy Not Politics for Smart Immigration Reform, Says Professor

University of Houston political science professor Jeronimo Cortina is very optimistic about the future of race relations in this country — an outlook he says was inspired by his students. “Everyone sees themselves as equals,” says Cortina, who immigrated to the United States from Mexico in 2001. “They are used… Read More

New Jersey Union Boss: America Doesn’t Function Without Immigrants

New Jersey Union Boss: America Doesn’t Function Without Immigrants

Walk through any Atlantic City casino and you’ll see immigrant dealers, bartenders, waiters, and more, says Bob McDevitt, president of UNITE HERE Local 54. The city’s largest union for casino workers. Local 54 has 10,000 members, two-thirds of whom are either Hispanic or Asian Americans. “If you take away immigrant… Read More

International Students Generate Millions for Oklahoma University — and Town

International Students Generate Millions for Oklahoma University — and Town

Kyle McMichael is the international student advisor at Southeastern Oklahoma State University, located in the small town of Durant, 150 miles southeast of Oklahoma City.  The mere presence of foreign students not only guarantees his job, it also represents roughly $3 million for the university in out-of-state tuition revenue. “They… Read More

Politicians, Not People, Divide Us, Says Lebanese-American Dentist

Politicians, Not People, Divide Us, Says Lebanese-American Dentist

When Omar Mahmassani arrived in the United States from Lebanon to begin studying dentistry at Georgetown University, he felt positively awed. “I felt so lucky,” he says of that day in 1984. “A degree from the United States is the gold standard. People look up to the United States as… Read More

Louisianan Says it’s the Strangers Who Make His Town Home

Louisianan Says it’s the Strangers Who Make His Town Home

Chris Wade cares about the people of Monroe, Louisiana. He was born there, raised there, and received a bachelor’s degree in psychology there, from the University of Louisiana at Monroe. He’s also spent a significant portion of his adult life volunteering in and around the city: driving a truck for… Read More

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