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No Economic Gains for U.S. Workers Where Ice Ramped Up Enforcement

June 2, 2026 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Despite the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, U.S.-born workers aren’t seeing more jobs or higher wages, including in sectors with a high share of immigrant labor.
Despite the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, U.S.-born workers aren’t seeing more jobs or higher wages, including in sectors with a high share of immigrant labor. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel)

By Chloe N. East and Elizabeth Cox

President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to strengthen the labor market. His immigration platform – including a pledge to conduct the largest deportation campaign in U.S. history – was central to that promise.

“For too long, Washington ignored how mass illegal immigration artificially suppressed wages, hurting working-class Americans – especially young men,” wrote Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on X in July 2025. “But under President Trump, we now have a secure border, a blue-collar wage boom, and major investments from trade deals.”

The labor market tells a different story. In the first year of Trump’s second term, unemployment rose, hiring slowed and wage growth stagnated. The construction sector was hit particularly hard.

We’re scholars of labor markets, immigration and public environmental policy who have examined how these economic trends can be traced to the mass deportation campaign of Trump’s second term. Notably, while areas with heavier ICE enforcement saw a drop in employment among immigrants, there was no increase in either employment or wages among U.S. citizens.

A chilling effect on immigrant workers

Using data from October 2023 through November 2025, we looked at employment rates and wages for immigrant and U.S.-born workers in places that experienced sudden spikes in ICE arrests and compared them to places that did not.

In the regions where U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramped up its activity, we found a significant drop in the employment rate among likely undocumented immigrants who were neither detained nor deported. This was especially notable in sectors where such workers are heavily represented – such as agriculture, construction, manufacturing and wholesale markets – where we found a 4% drop in the employment rate.

These immigrants appeared to be staying home out of fear, a concern that’s widespread. In a Pew Research survey from summer 2025, 43% of foreign-born respondents said they feared deportation for themselves or someone close to them. We call this a chilling effect, since these people aren’t physically removed from the labor market. Instead, they changed their behavior because of ICE.

The chilling effect on employment in Trump’s second term is roughly double of what we found in prior work on mass deportations, when we looked at a program in President Barack Obama’s first term called Secure Communities. As we wrote in a companion paper co-authored with sociologist Caitlin Patler, a likely explanation is that ICE arrests during Trump’s second term have been far more indiscriminate and visible: The average number of daily ICE arrests was higher than any time in the past 10 years. The percentage of arrests conducted in public spaces – streets, workplaces, courthouses and school parking lots – more than doubled, rising from 19% to nearly 50% of all apprehensions. As a result, the intimidation effect was likely more widespread.

The broader effects

Trump pledged during his 2024 presidential campaign to focus ICE enforcement on criminals, especially violent offenders. In fact, we found the share of immigrants arrested by ICE who had a criminal conviction fell to a nearly record low in this time period, from roughly 60% in January 2025 to under 30% by the end of the year.

The economic effects have extended beyond immigrant workers. More broadly, many consumers have pulled back.

Other researchers have found that in cities with expanded ICE raids in 2025, consumer spending and economic activity fell. In February 2026, for example, Minneapolis officials estimated that the city’s economy lost US$203 million due to falling restaurant, hotel and retail revenues, as well as lost wages. Another analysis found that states with enhanced ICE enforcement saw aggregate credit- and debit-card spending drop by 1.7 percentage points compared with those that did not.

Scholars have found similar effects with foot traffic, which dropped sharply in areas where ICE expanded its activities. A Wharton study released in May 2026, for instance, estimated that foot traffic in areas heavily impacted by ICE operations dropped by 2.7%, with spending down by 6.2%, per week.

A view of mostly empty stores in the 24 Somali Mall in Minneapolis, Minn., on Jan. 15, 2026.
In areas with heavy ICE enforcement, economic activity and foot traffic have fallen.
AP Photo/Abbie Parr

What happened to US-born workers?

Trump’s core political promise was that deportations would open up jobs for American workers. But we found the opposite: Employment among U.S.-born workers also declined in areas with heightened ICE activity. And employers didn’t respond by raising wages to attract more Americans to their workplace. Their demand for workers contracted instead.

At issue is the premise that foreign-born and U.S.-born workers directly compete for the same jobs. But the example of Trump 2.0 underscores a different dynamic. As we and other economists have documented, the labor market is not zero-sum. Immigrants and U.S.-born workers tend to fill complementary jobs rather than compete for identical ones.

Construction is a clear example. Fewer undocumented laborers on a job site means less work for the electricians, roofers and supervisors – roles more commonly held by U.S.-born workers who depend on those projects moving forward.

The broader stagnation of employment in the construction industry in 2025 fits this pattern. It also mirrors earlier findings that Obama-era deportations reduced homebuilding and pushed up new-home prices.

Immigration crackdowns are, of course, nothing new in U.S. history. In the early 1930s, President Herbert Hoover expelled 400,000 Mexican workers, which lifted neither wages nor employment of U.S.-born workers. Obama’s Secure Communities program in the 2010s had similar results.

And as our most recent research shows, mass deportations don’t create new job opportunities for American citizens. Presidents seeking to strengthen the labor market will need to look elsewhere.

Chloe N. East is Associate Professor of Economics, Elizabeth Cox is a Professional Research Assistant, Economics Department, both at the University of Colorado Boulder.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
See the Full Conversation Archives
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pogo says

    June 2, 2026 at 9:46 pm

    100%

    10
    Reply
  2. JimboXYZ says

    June 2, 2026 at 11:45 pm

    I understand that there’s a sharp decline in fraud & abuse ? Ask those employers why they won’t hire USA labor ? Sounds like a great/better question for the CEO(s) & the rest of the executive team(s) of overpaid, no value added types ?

    1
    Reply
    • The dude says

      June 3, 2026 at 7:32 am

      What is this “understanding” of yours actually based on?

      Fauz Nooz and NoozMax don’t count.

      9
      Reply
    • Deborah Coffey says

      June 3, 2026 at 8:39 am

      Sorry, Jimbo. Get the real FACTS. And, note that the largest amount of fraud and abuse is being conducted by Donald J. Trump. You, and all of us, are the victims of it, while Trump and all of his cronies are making billions. Why do you think they won’t hire USA labor? It’s simple; they want slavery again.

      13
      Reply
    • BillC says

      June 3, 2026 at 10:44 am

      “Amazon leads all companies with 30,184 disclosed layoffs across 2025 and 2026, followed by Intel with 27,058 and Microsoft with 15,347. These three tech giants account for roughly 64% of the disclosed layoffs in the top-ranked companies.”
      Those CEO’s are Jeff Bezos, Lip-Bu Tan and Satya Nadella.

      3
      Reply
    • Skibum says

      June 4, 2026 at 9:13 am

      Your “understanding” of this issue is so factually insufficient and misconstrued that I have to suggest that an elementary school kid probably could grasp it better! But, if you are so very keen on having “USA labor” take the place of immigrants who are no longer toiling in the hot sun out in our nation’s agriculture fields and farms because of the ICE purges… please stop the nonsensical utterances and show us your patriotic spirit!!

      !’m sure YOU, Jimbo, will be one of the first maga “USA labor” volunteers to get up at the crack of dawn and drive your sorry ass to any nearby agriculture farm, waving your red “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN” ball cap, pleading to be put to work picking potatoes, cabbage or whatever needs to be harvested to keep the local economy going. Right?! Bring some of your maga friends along too!

      And don’t forget to let us all know how it went. We want PICTURES!!!

      2
      Reply
  3. Deborah Coffey says

    June 3, 2026 at 6:31 am

    “For too long, Washington ignored how mass illegal immigration artificially suppressed wages, hurting working-class Americans – especially young men,” wrote Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on X in July 2025. “But under President Trump, we now have a secure border, a blue-collar wage boom, and major investments from trade deals.”

    This LIE above is as effective as moving the bulk of America’s money upward to the 1% and telling everyone it will “trickle down”…which it never has and never will. Study the Great Depression and all Republican recessions thereafter.

    13
    Reply
    • Sherry says

      June 3, 2026 at 4:39 pm

      Thank You Deborah! Right On!

      8
      Reply

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