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Large-scale immigration programs, such as those for international students and temporary foreign workers, can be abused by multinational corporations. These companies use the programs to hire workers with fewer rights at artificially low wages, which drives down overall wages and displaces the domestic workforce.

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While tariffs affect goods prices, immigration controls are reducing the labor supply, particularly in the service sector. This creates upward wage and price pressure on services, a subtle but significant contributor to overall inflation that is difficult to isolate in real-time data.

Wage stagnation is not accidental but a result of two concurrent policies. By sending manufacturing jobs overseas and simultaneously bringing in low-wage labor, corporations create a market where domestic workers lose nearly all leverage to demand higher pay for remaining jobs.

Key sectors like construction, agriculture, and home healthcare depend on immigrant labor because domestically-born workers are unwilling to perform these physically demanding jobs. This creates a structural economic dependency that is often overlooked in political debates about immigration.

To fill labor shortages, Japan brings in foreign workers under non-immigrant labels like 'student' or 'trainee.' This refusal to create a formal immigration policy creates a political vacuum, allowing populist groups to frame the influx of workers as a 'silent invasion.'

For decades, the US has benefited from a flexible, low-cost undocumented labor force that performs essential jobs domestic workers avoid. Both political parties have implicitly allowed this system to thrive because it is economically advantageous, creating a class of workers that is documented for profit but not for legal status.

America intentionally avoided solving illegal immigration because it serves a crucial economic purpose: providing a flexible, cheap labor force that doesn't draw on social safety nets. This benefits industries and consumers while placing little burden on the state.

In a true market economy, labor shortages are impossible; wages would simply rise to attract workers. The argument that a country needs low-skilled immigrants to fill jobs is often a way to artificially suppress wages for the domestic working class, preventing market forces from correcting the balance.

The restaurant industry, historically reliant on undocumented immigrants, faces a severe labor shortage due to tighter immigration. This has shrunk the pool of experienced cooks, causing the value of remaining documented workers to skyrocket. Wages now average nearly double the local minimum wage.

By shipping millions of jobs overseas, globalism forced American workers to compete with a much larger, cheaper international labor pool. This eliminated employers' need to compete for a finite domestic workforce, leading to wage stagnation. The proposed solution is to bring manufacturing jobs back to the U.S.

Beyond immediate labor supply issues, restrictive immigration policies, such as for H-1B visas and students, could have pernicious, long-term negative effects on US productivity. By limiting access to high-skilled talent, these policies threaten the country's technological edge and overall trend growth.

Corporations Exploit Uncapped Immigration to Suppress Domestic Wages | RiffOn