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哥伦布、匹兹堡及各地消息
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Loss of 1.7 Million Immigrants Fuels U.S.
Labor Shortages and Inflation
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By Jenny Manrique
August 29, 2022 |
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Close to 15% of job
openings that employ immigrant or foreign-born workers in the U.S.
are still vacant, while the legal immigration system is in dire
straits. From meat packing to home building to STEM professionals to
nurses, the post-pandemic economy is reeling from a labor force
decimated by restrictive immigration policies, which worsened under
Donald Trump’s administration.
The Halting of Immigration
“From the middle of 2019 until the end of 2021, there has been
essentially zero net immigration to the U.S,” said Giovanni Peri,
Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Founder and Director of the UC
Davis Global Migration Center, citing US Bureau census data.
“Although in late 2021 and early 2022 these numbers started growing
again, the fact that the inflow of immigrants stopped made the
country lose more than 1.7 million (immigrants),” added Peri, noting
that 900,000 of them would have been college educated who work in
the STEM sector – doctors, computer scientists, biomedical
engineers, bio experts — and 800,000 would have been non-college
educated concentrated in sectors such as food, hospitality, elderly
and child care. “We are talking about the 1.1% of the US labor
force,” Peri added.
Peri spoke during a?media briefing?on 8/26/22 hosted by Ethnic
Media Services that sounded the alarm over how the lack of
immigrants is hurting the economy. Meanwhile, public discussion
focuses on an estimated 2 million border crossings for the fiscal
year.
The halting of immigration coincides with more and more US citizens
opting to work from home in online jobs, and people in their 50s and
60s opting for early retirement. When companies are struggling to
hire people, wages go up and the rising cost of labor translates
into inflation, Peri explained.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics in July 2022, there
were 10 million unfilled jobs in the US. Before COVID, in a similar
period, that figure was 6 million.
Experts agree that there should be a government effort to make the
H1B visa program (sponsored by employers) stronger and more
inclusive for all sectors, while addressing the monstrous backlog in
green cards and asylum claims.
Backlogs and Delays in the Immigration Processes
“In the past six or seven years we have seen tremendous delays in
the immigration processes across the country, both in the courts and
also through the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS),”
said Gregory Z. Chen, Senior Director of Government Relations at the
American Immigration Lawyers Association. Chen noted that when
President Barack Obama left office, there were about 500,000
immigration cases in the backlog compared to 1.4 million cases
during the Trump administration.
“As of today we have about 1.6 million cases that are waiting to be
heard, (each one) typically takes four to six years now,” Chen said.
“Many businesses can’t wait to be operational.”
Meanwhile, the Automated Export System (AES), the agency in charge
of processing work permits, has increased its processing times from
180 days to up to seven months.
These backlogs can be fixed through a comprehensive immigration
reform. Although almost 70% of Americans are in favor of it, there
has been no appetite in a polarized Congress to ease restrictions
for even legal immigrants.
Chen highlighted how President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act
-recently signed into law- originally included provisions to
legalize unauthorized immigrants, a provision that had to be
abandoned to gain bipartisan support.
“The concern about the benefits immigration provides to the country
and the economy has been subsumed by the idea that it’s related to
border national security issues,” said Chen, who doesn’t see a major
immigration reform bill happening even in 2023.
Shortage of Nursing Professionals
For Julie Collins, perfusionist and Program Director Department of
Cardiopulmonary Sciences in the College of Health Sciences at Rush
University, one field where the absence of immigrants is acutely
felt is medical care.
Working on the COVID floor of her hospital for two years, Collins
saw firsthand the impact of the critical shortage of nursing
professionals.
“I was helping to cover shifts and I saw how burnt out nurses were
becoming taking care of patients in COVID units,” she said. “As
COVID began slowing down, nurses sought early retirement, some of
them changed professions, and some even died of COVID. This left us
with fewer nurses to fill the open positions in our units.”
Although COVID floors have been essentially shut down, hospitals are
short staffed and one-on-one patient care is over, she said.
“Oftentimes nurses are caring for multiple patients, which is
increasing their chances of creating errors and causing emotional
distress,”
There are close to 194,000 open positions for nurses, and not
enough US nurses to fill them. Since the 80s, when hospitals were
understaffed, nurses from other countries have filled these roles.
But today, annually, H1B visas are limited to 140,000 and
family-sponsored visas are limited to 226,000.
“I am seeing how tired and exhausted the nurses are and how
frustrated they feel like their voices aren’t being heard,” Collins
said.” If hospitals come up with a system so that they could keep
bringing in (immigrant) nurses, they wouldn’t have problems filling
their open positions,” she concluded. |
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