Why all these unnecessary foreign worker programs?

author Published by Jeremy Beck

July 2nd Update

The number of prime-working-age American men who aren’t working remains at or near record highs. Nearly 30 percent of non-college workers do not have jobs.  Young graduates are facing an employment crisis. High-school graduates ages 18 to 19 with no college averaged an unemployment rate of 14.5% over the past 12 months. Tech layoffs are surging, but H-1B requests are still chugging along.

June 26, 2025 Update

White collar jobs on the decline

NumbersUSA has historically emphasized the need for immigration policy to – at minimum – due no harm to America’s most vulnerable workers. To make the case for immigration reduction, however, one need only look at the situation for white collar workers, who have seen opportunities in the public sector decline for years now.

Two out of five employers told the World Economic Forum that they plan on cutting their workforce. These companies include some of America’s largest employers: Amazon, Google, Procter & Gamble, Microsoft, Estee Lauder, and Hewlett Packard. In light of these trends, what is the case for issuing over a million green cards every year to permanent foreign workers, and another roughly one million work permits to temporary foreign workers?

“It’s the worst job market for recent college graduates since the peak of the COVID pandemic and before that, since the Great Recession,” writes Ryan James Girdusky in his National Populist Newsletter. And yet the foreign-worker train keeps chugging along. Foreign-student enrollment and OPT workers are increasing, and the U.S. will grant another 100,000+ H-1B visas this year.


See: 2024 Top 200 Employers for OPT and STEM-OPT Students



“Too many grads, not enough jobs.”

Published June 15, 2025

I ripped these phrases from the news this month about the grim prospects ahead for American graduates in computer science and engineering (6.1 and 7.5 percent unemployment, respectively!). Wages are stagnant; there aren’t enough opportunities; and federal guest worker programs like OPT and H-1B are not only unnecessary, but are contributing to the problem.

Immigration maximalists sell guest worker programs as solutions to temporary labor shortages, but the reality is something else completely. These programs bypass domestic workers and exploit foreigners who work for less. As the headlines this week make clear, there is no shortage of American STEM talent. So why is our government filling hundreds of thousands of jobs with guest workers?

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