What Immigration Really Means for the U.S. Economy

Most immigration debates focus on the border, but the bigger fight right now is about enforcement inside the country.


The Big Story

Congress is debating how immigration enforcement should work inside the United States, including the authority, funding, and oversight of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

The issue has become a major sticking point in negotiations over federal spending and broader immigration policy.


The Two Spins

From the Left

  • Immigration enforcement should have clearer limits and stronger oversight so arrests don’t happen in places like schools or hospitals.
  • The current system relies too heavily on detention and deportation and should move toward a different enforcement approach.

From the Right

  • Government should enforce laws against illegal immigration while supporting those who enter the country legally.
  • Limiting ICE’s authority or resources could make enforcement harder and encourage more people to remain in the U.S. without legal status.

What This Means for Us

Immigration policy affects jobs, businesses, and public services Americans rely on.

Cities like New York have spent over $8 billion since 2023 housing migrants, while California spent about $8.4 billion on health coverage in 2024–2025.

At the same time, immigrants have helped build major American companies like Google and Nvidia and paid over $650 billion in U.S. taxes in 2023 as well as contributed billions in consumer spending, which strengthens our economy.


How They Make Money

GEO Group

  • The company runs immigration detention centers under contracts with the federal government. ICE contracts generate around $1 billion or more annually for the company.
  • The government pays contractors a per-diem rate for each detainee housed, meaning revenue rises as more detention beds are filled.

Takeaway

Government contracts that run detention centers and related services employ hundreds of Americans in roles like security, healthcare, food service, and facility operations.


The Number That Stuck With Me

$1 billion

More than half of U.S. startup companies valued at $1 billion or more were founded by immigrants.

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