What America Might Look Like
with Zero Immigration
The Trump administration’s efforts to reduce
the foreign-born population are being felt in hospitals and soccer leagues and on
Main Streets across the country, with hints of what’s to come.
Context
·
One year into President Trump’s immigration
crackdown, the U.S. is experiencing widespread effects across industries and
communities.
·
Policies include: higher visa fees, near-zero
refugee admissions, reduced student visas, rollback of temporary legal statuses,
and mass deportations (over 600,000 people expelled).
·
Aim: reduce immigration to levels similar
to the 1920s shutdown, when net immigration fell to zero.
Immediate Impacts
·
Labor shortages:
o Construction
firms in Louisiana lack carpenters.
o Hospitals
in West Virginia face shortages of doctors and nurses.
o Childcare
centers risk losing staff.
·
Community effects:
o Soccer
leagues, concerts, and festivals see declining participation.
o Restaurants,
churches, and schools in immigrant-heavy towns are quieter.
·
Marshalltown, Iowa:
once revitalized by immigrants, now facing declining attendance at schools, churches,
and workplaces due to deportations and visa uncertainty.
Historical Echo
·
Mirrors the Immigration Act of 1924,
which barred entry from Asia and restricted southern/eastern Europeans.
·
Then, as now: debates over crime, assimilation,
wages, and fertility rates.
·
Evidence from past restrictions:
o Short-term
wage increases for U.S.-born workers.
o Long-term
contraction in industries reliant on immigrant labor (agriculture,
mining, manufacturing).
o Employers
turned to automation, outsourcing, or alternative labor
sources.
Economic & Social Consequences
·
Healthcare:
West Virginia faces acute shortages; nearly 1/5 nursing positions vacant.
·
Agriculture:
crops requiring manual labor (e.g., onions, dairy farming)
struggle without immigrant workers.
·
Business & Innovation:
o International
students declining → budget holes in universities.
o Immigrants
disproportionately start businesses; nearly half of Fortune 500 firms founded by
immigrants or their children.
o Fewer
patents and start-ups due to restrictions.
·
Community vitality:
towns like Lancaster, PA rely on immigrants for growth; restrictions risk stagnation.
Human Stories
·
Families like the Fedkos
from Ukraine face uncertainty with parole extensions and asylum applications.
·
Workers in childcare, restaurants, and farms
risk losing permits, worsening shortages.
·
Employers (e.g., hospitals, farms, restaurants)
struggle to replace skilled immigrant labor.
·
Cultural life (concerts, rodeos, festivals)
diminished as immigrant communities retreat.
Takeaways
·
Immigration restrictions are reshaping daily
life, labor markets, healthcare, education, and culture.
·
While some wages rise due to shortages, industries
risk contraction and communities lose vitality.
·
Long-term challenge: an aging population
with fewer workers to provide care, threatening economic and social sustainability.
In short: The article shows how Trump’s push
toward near-zero immigration is already straining U.S. labor, healthcare, education, and community life, echoing the
disruptions of the 1920s crackdown and raising questions about America’s future
vitality.
[ABS
News Service/29.12.2025]
Across
the United States, someone is missing.
One
year into President Trump’s immigration crackdown, construction firms in Louisiana
are scrambling to find carpenters. Hospitals in West Virginia have lost out on doctors
and nurses who were planning to come from overseas. A neighborhood
soccer league in Memphis cannot field enough teams because immigrant children have
stopped showing up.
America
is closing its doors to the world, sealing the border, squeezing the legal avenues
to entry and sending new arrivals and longtime residents to the exits.
Visa
fees have been jacked up, refugee admissions are almost zero and international student
admissions have dropped. The rollback of temporary legal statuses granted under
the Biden administration has rendered hundreds of thousands more people newly vulnerable
to removal at any time. The administration says it has already expelled more than
600,000 people.
Shrinking
the foreign-born population won’t happen overnight. Oxford Economics estimates that
net immigration is running at about 450,000 people a year under current policies.
That is well below the two million to three million a year who came in under the
Biden administration. The share of the country’s population that is foreign born
hit 14.8 percent in 2024, a high not seen since 1890.
But
White House officials have made clear they are aiming for something closer to the
immigration shutdown of the 1920s, when Congress, at the crest of a decades-long
surge in nativism, barred entry of people from half of the world and brought net
immigration down to zero. The share of the foreign-born population bottomed out
at 4.7 percent in 1970. Stephen Miller, a top adviser to Mr. Trump, has extolled
those decades of low immigration as the last time the United States was “an undisputed
global superpower.”
Whether
or not restrictions will restore some of what Mr. Miller views as a midcentury idyll, there’s little doubt that major changes are
in store. Immigration has woven itself so tightly through the country’s fabric —
in classrooms and hospital wards, city parks and concert halls, corporate boardrooms
and factory floors — that walling off the country now will profoundly alter daily
life for millions of Americans.
Grocery
stores and churches are quieter in immigrant neighborhoods.
Fewer students show up in Los Angeles and New York City. In South Florida, Billo’s
Caracas Boys, a Venezuelan orchestra, puts on an annual holiday concert where generations
of families come to dance salsas and paso dobles. This
year, the orchestra announced at the last minute that it was canceling the show because so many people are nervous about
leaving home.
The
changes will also be felt hundreds of miles from any ocean or national border, even
in the snow-washed streets of Marshalltown, Iowa, a city of 28,000 about an hour’s
drive northeast of Des Moines.
First
Mexicans, some undocumented, came to Marshalltown in the 1990s to work at the pork
processing plant. After a high-profile immigration raid there in 2006, refugees
with more solid legal status arrived from Myanmar, Haiti and the Democratic Republic
of Congo.
Now,
Mexican, Chinese and Vietnamese restaurants dot the blocks around the grand, 19th-century
courthouse. The population is 19 percent foreign born, and some 50 dialects are
spoken in the public schools. The pews at the Spanish-language Mass at the local
Catholic church overflow on Sundays, and, in 2021, a Burmese religious society built
a towering statue of Buddha on the outskirts of town.
“You
have more energy in the community,” said Michael Ladehoff, Marshalltown’s mayor-elect.
“If you stay stagnant, and you don’t have new people coming to your community, you
start aging out.”
But
with President Trump’s crackdown on immigration gaining strength, local festivals
are more thinly attended. Parents pull their children out of school when they hear
about people being detained. The supervisor overseeing the construction of a high
school sports stadium received a deportation letter, creating a conspicuous absence
as the work finished up. The pork plant has let workers go as their work permits
have expired.
The
insecurity of each immigrant ripples into the wider community. Sergii Fedko and his wife, Tetiana, came to Marshalltown in 2023 along
with five other Ukrainian families under an immigration parole program for their
war-torn country.
Mr.
Fedko, a power plant engineer in Ukraine, was quickly
hired at a local architecture firm as a designer and draftsman. Ms. Fedko works at a day care center,
where she is beloved by her charges. Their three sons are enrolled in school; the
eldest excel at soccer and swimming. They bought two cars and a fixer-upper house.
New
immigration policies have loosened their toehold in America. They applied for an
extension well before their two-year parole ended, but the White House paused processing
and changed the rules. As the weeks ticked by and they didn’t hear back, they got
nervous, and decided to apply for asylum as well. In mid-December, Mr. Fedko got notice that his application for the extension had
been approved, but it would require a new $1,000 fee. His wife’s application is
still in limbo.
If
she loses her work permit, it will add to the acute shortage of child care workers
that is making it harder for American parents to go to work. Mr. Fedko’s manager, Heidi Hogan, has been doing everything she
can to help. Her reasons aren’t entirely selfless; there aren’t many skilled draftsmen
in the area.
“If
he can’t stay with us,” Ms. Hogan said, “I’m going to have a hard time finding someone
else.”
An Echo of the Past
It’s
not clear yet what these changes will mean for America. But a past era of immigration
crackdowns contains some lessons.
Over
the country’s first century, immigration was essentially unrestricted at the federal
level. This began to change in the late 1800s, with the “great wave” of immigrants
fleeing political oppression or seeking work. Starting in the 1870s and over the
decades that followed, Congress barred criminals, anarchists, the indigent and all
Chinese laborers.
By
the turn of the 20th century, anti-immigrant sentiment was rampant. The lawyer and
eugenicist Madison Grant wrote in his 1916 book, “The Passing of the Great Race,”
that foreign countries were taking advantage of America’s openness by unloading
“the sweepings of their jails and asylums” and that the “whole tone of American
life, social, moral and political has been lowered and vulgarized by them.”
Grant
was consulted as an expert when Congress began crafting the Immigration Act of 1924,
which, along with companion legislation, barred nearly all immigration from Asia,
created the U.S. Border Patrol and established quotas from eastern and southern
European countries. Net immigration — which accounts for people leaving as well
as those coming in — plummeted.
Today’s
language echoes that time. President Trump characterizes people from Somalia, Haiti
and Afghanistan as coming from “hellholes” and accuses other countries of “emptying
out their prisons and their mental institutions into the United States of America.”
The
broader debate in the 1920s would be familiar to contemporary ears, too: fears about
crime; anxiety about the falling fertility rates of the native born; suspicion about
the politics of newcomers; hopes that restrictions would mean higher wages for U.S.-born
workers; disputes about assimilation.
Today,
some proponents of halting immigration — including Vice President JD Vance — argue
that it would help the country absorb those who were already here, decrease competition
for scarce goods like housing and strengthen job opportunities for young men who
had dropped out of the work force. Reihan Salam, president of the conservative Manhattan
Institute, wrote in his 2018 book, “Melting Pot or Civil War?,”
that a large and constantly growing population of low-skilled immigrants, many living
in working-class ethnic enclaves, risks creating a “permanent underclass.”
Evidence
is mixed on the effect of the 1920s restrictions on assimilation. Some researchers
have found that, without newcomers arriving from their home countries, immigrants
were more likely to marry American-born citizens and less likely to live in ethnically
homogenous neighborhoods. Other studies suggest that policies
aimed at forcing assimilation backfired, strengthening the determination to maintain
ethnic identities.
Regardless,
the effects of that period continue to reverberate. Melissa Marinaro, who directs
the Italian American Program at the Heinz History Center
in Pittsburgh, said that when people who fled Italy in the years around World War
II could not join family members in the United States, they went to Australia or
Canada instead.
“One
hundred years later, we still have Italian American families who are split from
their extended families,” she said.
The
restrictions passed in the 1920s governed U.S. immigration until international competition
in the Cold War, the civil rights movement and a shift in organized labor’s stance led to the end of national origins quotas in
1965.
Although
the effects of the 1924 immigration restrictions are difficult to untangle from
other developments — wars, technological advancements, the baby boom — wages rose
for U.S.-born workers in places affected by the immigrant restrictions. But only
briefly. Employers avoided paying more by hiring workers from Mexico and Canada,
countries not subject to immigration caps; American-born workers from small towns
migrated to urban areas and alleviated shortages. Farms turned to automation to
replace the missing labor. The coal mining industry, which
was powered by immigrants now barred from entry, shrank.
And
today? Construction wages have been rising, even as home building has been sluggish
— a potential indication that deportations in the immigrant-heavy industry are bidding
up salaries. The union representing workers in the pork processing industry sees
an upside, too, even though it opposes deportations and won wage increases after
President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s immigration surge.
“I
will certainly bring it up at the bargaining table that the way to solve a labor shortage is to pay more money,” said Mark Lauritsen, head
of the meatpacking division at the United Food and Commercial Workers Union International.
The
same is true in landscaping. Immigrant crews, working outside, were an easy deportation
target over the summer. Come spring, said Kim Hartmann, an executive at a Chicago-area
landscaping firm, the labor force could be 10 to 20 percent
smaller.
“It’s
going to be much more competitive to find that individual who’s been a foreman or
a supervisor and has years of experience,” Ms. Hartmann said. “We know that drives
costs up.”
But
there are limits to how much customers will pay for decorative shrubs, and they
may opt to go without. One 2022 study examined the expulsion of tens of thousands
of Mexicans from the United States in the early 1930s. Contrary to the policy’s
intent, unemployment rose and wages were depressed for native-born workers, possibly
because sectors that depended on immigrant labor — agriculture,
construction and manufacturing — suffered so much that they contracted.
The
lesson of the last period of intense restriction is that employers have an array
of ways to adjust, said Leah Boustan, an economics professor at Yale who studies
the history of immigration.
“The
menu is other sources of labor, and machinery,” she said.
“It’s not obvious that you’re going to pick the guy down the street relative to
these alternatives.”
Where Hands Still Matter
Today,
that menu has expanded. Companies can outsource jobs to other countries. Artificial
intelligence is replacing some types of work, and other countries, like Japan, have
shown the possibilities of robotics. But many services still require humans, in
person.
“If
you’re an obstetrician, delivering a baby right in the moment, you need hands to
lay on the patient,” said David Goldberg, a vice president of Vandalia Health, a
network of hospitals and medical offices in West Virginia. “It’s not the same as
a banker, or someone creating code.”
Nearly
a fifth of nursing positions are currently vacant in West Virginia — a state that
is older, sicker and poorer than most — and the state faces a serious shortage of
physicians in the coming years. The answer has been to look abroad. A third of West
Virginia’s physicians graduated from medical schools overseas. Now that option is
narrowing.
“We
lost two cardiologists because of their concern that they wouldn’t get their visa
and, if they did, that they would not be able to stay here permanently,” Mr. Goldberg
said. “They went elsewhere.”
Similarly,
nobody has figured out how to harvest delicate crops with machines. During the low-immigration
1970s, some crops, like green onions, disappeared from shelves or were imported
instead.
“It’s
not going to hop from the ground into a package without somebody’s hands being involved
somewhere along the way,” said Luke Brubaker, who runs a dairy farm with his sons
and a grandson in Pennsylvania. To milk cows, feed them and deliver calves, he relies
on more than a dozen foreign-born workers, most of them Mexican. He is not optimistic
that he will be able to replace them.
“You
can put an ad in the paper,” he said. “Maybe you would have one American-born applying
for that job if you need 10 people. And that’s a maybe.”
For
now, Mr. Brubaker can still find staff. The surge of immigrants who entered the
United States under President Biden — more than eight million people — means that
many foreign-born workers are still available.
That
surge helped create an anti-immigrant backlash, inflaming fears about crime and
jobs. It also stung immigrants who felt they had faced higher barriers than newer
ones from places like Venezuela.
“The
Mexican population felt that it was not fair,” said Alfonso Medina, who owns La
Carreta, a Tex-Mex restaurant in Marshalltown started by his father, a Mexican immigrant,
in 2000. “Imagine you’re here for 20, 30 years contributing. And all of a sudden
here comes this administration and starts letting people in right away with a permit.
They felt betrayed.”
In
2024, they shifted toward Mr. Trump.
Land of Opportunity?
Dan
Simpson, the chief executive of Taziki’s, a fast casual
Mediterranean restaurant chain based in the Southeast, has been losing employees
since the beginning of the year. These were not only dishwashers and cooks but also
managers and assistant managers, who had come to the United States with advanced
degrees.
While
he worries about the effect on his own business, he believes that the damage could
be much greater.
“If
you zoom back, the bigger problem is that we’re tarnishing the brand of America,”
Mr. Simpson said. Even if the United States opens up again, he said, “we’re going
to need a campaign to fix the idea that America is not the land of opportunity.”
International
students pay full-freight tuition that helps fund new programs and basic costs at
many U.S. colleges. As international enrollment has dropped,
many schools are facing budget holes.
Nearly
half of the immigrants who legally came to the United States from 2018 to 2022 were
college educated, according to the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think
tank. Immigrants are far more likely than U.S. citizens to start businesses; nearly
half of this year’s Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or the children
of immigrants.
Several
studies have found a decline in the number of patents issued for U.S. inventions
after the immigration laws of the 1920s.
“You
have an economy that is smaller, less dynamic and less diversified,” said Exequiel
Hernandez, a professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
In
early 2025, Rayan Sadri was raising money for his artificial-intelligence start-up.
In June, the Trump administration barred everyone from a list of Muslim and other
countries, including Iran, where Mr. Sadri is from. Based in Montreal and unable
to travel in the United States, Mr. Sadri could no longer easily meet potential
investors and customers. Moving the company to San Francisco, as he would have liked,
was not going to happen. Among other factors, the ban slowed the young company’s
momentum.
“Everything
for start-ups is momentum,” said Mr. Sadri, who is now going to work for another
tech company in Canada.
It’s
not just Silicon Valley. Small enterprises across the country have been built by
and for immigrants — and been embraced by a wider community. In Marshalltown, Luisa
Ortega has been putting on Mexican-style rodeos and popular music acts since 2012.
In recent years, white residents have started coming, too. “They like the all-day
show, they want to be able to go and dance,” she said.
‘What Is the Future?’
Over
the longer term, low immigration will collide with one inexorable trend: an aging
population in need of care just as fewer workers are available to provide it.
Half
of the people who work at Sinai Residences, a senior living facility in Boca Raton,
Fla., are immigrants. Rachel Blumberg, the chief executive, has already had to notify
38 workers from Cuba, Haiti and Venezuela that they will have to go because the
Trump administration ended their country’s temporary legal status. That is 9 percent
of her work force.
“It
was like this funeral that would never end,” she said, of those conversations. “They’re
my best employees.”
Rural
areas and postindustrial cities have long struggled with
an exodus of the young and the growing needs of the older residents who are left
behind. Many of these places have pinned their futures on immigrants.
Lancaster
County, Pa., most famous for a community that has refused to assimilate — the Amish
— has over the years also become home to a global marketplace. People from Myanmar
now fill the pews of a Mennonite church founded in the 1700s. Scores of Congolese
refugees work at local distribution centers. The county
seat, Lancaster, has two Nepalese restaurants. Resettling refugees, long a mission
of local Mennonites, has become central to Lancaster’s growth strategy.
Unlike
most Pennsylvania counties, “Lancaster’s numbers are growing,” said Heather Valudes,
the president of the Lancaster Chamber of Commerce. “But that is simply because
of immigrants.”
Ahmed
Ahmed, 31, arrived in Lancaster when he was 3. His parents,
refugees from Chad, worked as certified nursing assistants, taking care of Lancaster’s
elderly; Mr. Ahmed became the manager of a local hotel and a city councilman.
He
now supervises some of the immigrants who came after him, including several Cuban
refugees who worked at the hotel. This summer, they learned that their temporary
work permits had expired. The Haitian workers at the poultry plant learned this,
too. As did the Ukrainian employees at the Walmart.
They
are now stuck in limbo. The economy is closed to them, but they are unable to return
home — the United States does not even allow commercial flights into Haiti. Shut
out of the formal work force, some will probably move to larger cities and look
for under-the-table jobs, delivering food or cleaning homes.
Mr.
Ahmed was not sure what became of the Cubans he worked with. He is concerned about
them, and also worried about what may lie in store for his adopted hometown.
“This
is only Year 1,” he said. “What is the future?”