Report: Visa programs are over crowded, lower wages

Report: Visa programs are over crowded, lower wages

Spread the love

Foreign worker visa programs in the United States are not doing enough to spur economic growth and recruit native workers, according to a new report.

The Economic Policy Institute released a report that says the H-2B visa program is bloated and stifles wage growth.

“Expansion of H-2B should be avoided,” the report summary reads. “What’s needed instead are new rules for H-2B and worker protections and a viable path to lawful permanent residence for the hundreds of thousands of workers who are employed in the United States through this program.”

The H-2B visa program is used for nonagricultural temporary workers, primarily in landscaping, construction and hospitality industries.

The Economic Policy Institute found that the H-2B program expanded to 169,177 people in 2024 despite having a statutory cap of 66,000 per year designated by Congress.

The Department of Homeland Security can approve supplemental H-2B visas based on demand in a given year. The report found DHS approved 64,716 supplemental visas in addition to the statutory cap of 66,000.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services also exempts workers from the cap who extend their stay or change employees. In 2024, EPI found the State Department offered 139,541 new visas for workers while 4,850 H-2B workers had their employment extended and 25,056 workers changed their employers.

Rosemary Jenks, policy director at the Immigration Accountability Project, said programs like H-2B are taking jobs from American workers.

“There are millions of young Americans, people who are in high school or in college who need entry-level jobs,” Jenks said. “Those jobs are not available to Americans in a lot of places because we’re importing foreign workers to do them.”

While the H-2B visa program continues to be used at a vast rate, EPI found many employers using the visa system undercut U.S. wages significantly.

EPI compared average hourly wages of H-2B workers in jobs such as landscaping, hospitality and meatpacking to national average hourly wages from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In the meatpacking industry, H-2B worker wages were 22.2% less than the national average.

For landscapers, H-2B workers made $17.55 per hour compared to the national average of $19.66 per hour.

The Department of Labor uses the prevailing wages determination to decide how much to pay an employee. However, EPI argues that employers often cherry-pick data to pay H-2B workers the lowest wages possible. Instead, the institute suggests requiring employers to pay the highest of the local, state or national average wage according to BLS data.

“H-2B workers are underpaid and can only make temporary minor contributions to local economies under the status quo,” the report reads.

Jenks said the wage disparity in visa programs like the H-2B shows why industries have a hard time recruiting American workers.

“Americans will do hard work for livable wages, they will not do hard work for slave wages,” Jenks said.

Jenks said reforms seeking to expand visa programs are aimed at amnesty instead of trying to improve outcomes in the systems.

“It’s not a reform of the system, it is making the system worse,” Jenks said. “I have not seen any big efforts to fix the H-2A or H-2B in several years.”

EPI called on the Trump administration and Congress to expand the H-2B program by protecting wages that allow for pathways to permanent residences and citizenship, instead of temporary worker status.

EPI criticized employers for not making adequate attempts to recruit American workers and called on the Trump administration to implement reforms.

“Any proposed legislation should shift away from the use of temporary workers and create green cards – allowing migrant workers to stay in the United States permanently, increasing their economic contributions and participation in social and political life,” the report read.

EPI also recommends the Trump administration make practical changes to the Department of Labor’s H-2B employer oversight to require employers pay the highest of the local, state or national wage for the specific job.

“Together, congressional and executive reforms could transform a program that brings a temporary, exploitable, and underpaid workforce into one that brings permanent workers with full and equal rights to the United States,” the report reads.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Pro-life org to Trump: Taxpayers should not be forced to fund killing of unborn children

Pro-life org to Trump: Taxpayers should not be forced to fund killing of unborn children

By Tate MillerThe Center Square The Trump administration’s decision to send tax dollars to the abortion industry by continuing former President Joe Biden’s Title X grant awards to Planned Parenthood...
Birthright citizenship advocates confident in SCOTUS hearing

Birthright citizenship advocates confident in SCOTUS hearing

By Emily RodriguezThe Center Square Advocates cheered after the Supreme Court heard a case to determine the constitutional validity of President Donald Trump’s executive order to end birthright citizenship. Dozens...
College funding bill draws dissent from big Illinois universities

College funding bill draws dissent from big Illinois universities

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Lawmakers questioned Illinois university leaders about a contentious bill that adjusts how new money is allocated to...
Illinois quick hits: Chicago announces $300 million housing spend; Rockford men faces cocaine trafficking charges; State to honor troopers killed in the ling of duty

Illinois quick hits: Chicago announces $300 million housing spend; Rockford men faces cocaine trafficking charges; State to honor troopers killed in the ling of duty

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Chicago announces $300 million housing spend Mayor Brandon Johnson and the Chicago Department of Housing say they will invest more than...
Pentagon commits to tripling Patriot missile production at $4 million per

Pentagon commits to tripling Patriot missile production at $4 million per

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Boeing is partnering with the Department of War to triple its production of seekers for Patriot missiles, according to a joint announcement Wednesday. The U.S....
Supreme Court appears skeptical of Trump's birthright citizenship order

Supreme Court appears skeptical of Trump’s birthright citizenship order

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday scrutinized President Donald Trump's executive order to end birthright citizenship, raising skeptical questions in a pivotal hearing. The justices heard...
Advocates urge stable tariff policy, protections against China

Advocates urge stable tariff policy, protections against China

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Advocates sparred Wednesday over the Trump administration’s trade and national security policy, particularly with concerns over China. Advocates and experts gathered at the American Institute...
Illinois senators scrutinize diversity commission's high salaries, poor performance

Illinois senators scrutinize diversity commission’s high salaries, poor performance

By Jared Strong | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) -- An Illinois state senator, responding to an investigation by The Center Square, suggested Wednesday that the state's...
Trump demands second 'big beautiful bill' on his desk by June 1

Trump demands second ‘big beautiful bill’ on his desk by June 1

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Seven weeks into the Department of Homeland Security shutdown, President Donald Trump is working with Republican congressional leaders to craft a party-line budget reconciliation bill...
ALEC: State regulations drive up electricity prices

ALEC: State regulations drive up electricity prices

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square Electricity prices and other measures of consumer energy affordability are highest in states with the most extensive policy mandates, compliance requirements, and the most rigid...
Chicago mayor announces homelessness plan with unclear funding sources

Chicago mayor announces homelessness plan with unclear funding sources

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago officials unveiled a plan they say would effectively end homelessness in the city, even as questions...
Minnesota wins legal fight over tuition benefits for illegal immigrants

Minnesota wins legal fight over tuition benefits for illegal immigrants

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square A federal judge has dismissed a U.S. Department of Justice lawsuit challenging Minnesota’s policy of offering in-state tuition and certain scholarships to students in the...
Illini Final Four trip expected to benefit University of Illinois, state of Indiana

Illini Final Four trip expected to benefit University of Illinois, state of Indiana

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A University of Illinois professor says the economic benefit of the school’s mens basketball team reaching the...
Trump makes history at Supreme Court amid landmark birthright citizenship challenge

Trump makes history at Supreme Court amid landmark birthright citizenship challenge

By Emily Rodriguez and Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump made history Wednesday by attending oral arguments at the U.S. Supreme Court over his executive order seeking to end...
New Hampshire school district sued over transgender policies

New Hampshire school district sued over transgender policies

By Chris WadeThe Center Square A New Hampshire school district is being investigated by the Trump administration over allegations that administrators are allowing biological men to use girls’ restrooms and...