Immigration Can Help Meet Labor Demands and Move the US Economy Forward

WASHINGTON, May 4, 2022—New data released today by the American Immigration Council examines how immigration can help meet labor demands and steer the U.S. economy back on track. The report, “Amid Rising Inflation, Immigrant Workers Help Ease Labor Shortages,” analyzes how the demand for various occupations across the entire U.S. labor market has changed since before the COVID-19 pandemic and which occupations are expected to increase between 2020 and 2030.


As America faces a labor crisis, grapples with the highest levels of inflation since the 1980s, and U.S. job openings hit an 11.5 million record high in March, this report exposes the need for immigrant workers to make up for the labor shortfall and shows the importance of immigration in creating a sustainable economy.

The report draws on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the American Community Survey, and job openings from Burning Glass to assess how the labor market has shifted since pre-pandemic times, which occupations will experience increased demand, and the role of immigrant workers in occupations that have the highest growth potential over the next decade. Immigration

“Our findings reveal that not only are the most in-demand jobs now expected to continue to outpace the supply of available labor in the near term but by 2030 millions of additional workers will be needed to fill new jobs and those vacated by retiring workers. While young people entering the workforce will fill many jobs, the gap between the demand and a diminishing supply of U.S.-born workers suggests that more workers will need to come from abroad to make up for the shortfall—or these positions will go unfilled,” said Andrew Lim, research director at the American Immigration Council. “While the COVID-19 pandemic brought massive disruptions to the U.S. labor market, our research found that immigrants have been a stabilizing force, filling openings in essential occupations and helping to meet the demand for the fastest-growing jobs over the next decade.” Immigration

The main findings of the report include the following:

This new data is the first in a series of research pieces that will explore a variety of issues at the intersection of the U.S. economy and immigration. The Immigration and Labor Market Series can be accessed here. Immigration

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