In the News

In the News

Ten-Year Decline in U.S. Farm Labor Has Cost U.S. Economy $3.1B Annually in Crop Production, Report Shows

Ten-Year Decline in U.S. Farm Labor Has Cost U.S. Economy $3.1B Annually in Crop Production, Report Shows

  CONTACT Sarah Doolin, New American Economy, [email protected] Between 2002 and 2012, the number of new field and crop workers immigrating to the United States fell by roughly 75 percent. New York—At a time when more Americans are trying to eat fresh and locally grown produce, farmers… Read More

On U.S. Farms, Fewer Hands for the Harvest

On U.S. Farms, Fewer Hands for the Harvest

Last year, about a quarter of Biringer Farm’s strawberries and raspberries rotted in the field because it couldn’t find enough workers. Samantha Bond was determined not to let that happen again. Early this year, Ms. Bond, human resources manager for the 35-acre farm in Arlington, Wash., offered 20% raises to the most… Read More

Making the Grade: The Economic Impact of Attracting and Retaining International Students in Ohio

Making the Grade: The Economic Impact of Attracting and Retaining International Students in Ohio

“Making the Grade: The Economic Impact of Attracting and Retaining International Students in Ohio” draws on data from the U.S. Department of Education, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, to find that: Increasing the share of international students at universities in Ohio would… Read More

Making the Grade: The Economic Impact of Attracting and Retaining International Students in Ohio

Making the Grade: The Economic Impact of Attracting and Retaining International Students in Ohio

“Making the Grade: The Economic Impact of Attracting and Retaining International Students in Ohio” draws on data from the U.S. Department of Education, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, to find that: Increasing the share of international students at universities in Ohio would… Read More

A Vanishing Breed: How the Decline in U.S. Farm Laborers Over the Last Decade Has Hurt the U.S. Economy and Slowed Production on American Farms

A Vanishing Breed: How the Decline in U.S. Farm Laborers Over the Last Decade Has Hurt the U.S. Economy and Slowed Production on American Farms

New American Economy’s new report, “A Vanishing Breed: How the Decline in U.S. Farm Laborers Over the Last Decade Has Hurt the U.S. Economy and Slowed Production on American Farms,” shows that in the last decade, as fewer young agricultural workers have come to the United States,… Read More

How Immigration Reform Can Strengthen The Coverage For U.S. Seniors

How Immigration Reform Can Strengthen The Coverage For U.S. Seniors

Americans are retiring in greater numbers. As our senior citizens age and leave the workforce, an increasing proportion of the population is depending more and more on on our already strained entitlement programs, including Medicare and Social Security. But to stay solvent, these entitlement programs need greater numbers of young… Read More

Cleveland Taxis Broadcast Immigration Ads

Cleveland Taxis Broadcast Immigration Ads

The Cleveland area is getting inundated with political rhetoric and ads timed to run coincide with Thursday’s Republican debate. Promoted posts on Twitter, Facebook videos, pre-rolls, protesters and placards — the debate has spilled into seemingly every street and glowing screen and even into taxicabs. The… Read More

How Immigration Reform Can Strengthen the U.S. Healthcare System

How Immigration Reform Can Strengthen the U.S. Healthcare System

America is getting older. To meet the growing healthcare demands of the country’s aging population, the United States will need younger workers to fill critical shortages at all skill levels of the medical industry. From physicians and surgeons to home health aides, immigrants can help meet these increasing demands, ensuring… Read More

Global Detroit Welcomes 105 New Americans

Global Detroit Welcomes 105 New Americans

This past June marked the second celebration of Immigrant Heritage Month, a month dedicated to sharing stories celebrating the diversity and shared heritage that make America. We’re a country built by immigrants, and one of our greatest strengths lies in the new people we welcome every year. Global Detroit chose… Read More

How immigrants help health reform succeed

How immigrants help health reform succeed

Medicare turns 50 today, which has provided an opportunity for all manner of retrospectives and speculation about what the future holds. The Partnership for a New American Economy is publicizing one of my favorite arguments: that immigrants are a key reason that Medicare is still solvent. Their 2014 study (Staying Covered:… Read More

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg