Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Who are ‘our poor’ in the immigration debate?
Who are ‘our poor’ in the immigration debate?
Nov 1, 2025 4:49 PM

At First Things last week,in his essay “Our Poor,” economist Andrew M. Yuengert reflected upon his 2004 Acton monograph Inhabiting the Land, questioning whether his economic analysis (that immigration is a net gain for both immigrants and natives) needs more nuance in the light of our current political climate:

In Inhabiting the Land I concluded that we could only argue against immigration if we were willing to “weigh the wage decrease for native unskilled workers more heavily than the significant increase in wages that is enjoyed by immigrants from much poorer countries.” In other words, we would have to be willing to count the costs to native unskilled workers more than the much larger benefits to poor immigrants. I wrote this somewhat dismissively—surely we shouldn’t prevent poor immigrants from quadrupling their es simply to keep unskilled natives’ wages from stagnating?

In light of the well-documented plight of low-wage native workers today, I have found myself returning to this passage frequently. Should I have cared more about the predicted effects of immigration on the native poor?

Yuengert’s reflection is e. It is nuanced and challenging.

Despite that nuance, toward the end, he worries that simply his use of the term “foreigner” will be misconstrued as “assaulting the dignity of our brothers and sisters from other places.” He continues,

Those inclined to world citizenship and world markets are too often unable to explore the moral distinctions necessary to grapple with the claims of citizenship, and censorious toward those who try.

In contrast, I don’t think he means to assault anyone’s dignity. I simply hope to add a little more of that much-needed moral nuance here. In particular, I have two concerns:

The first concern is that the terms of the debate are in fact more fluid than is often assumed. For example, Yuengert contrasts “natives” and “immigrants.” He does not mean Native Americans by “natives,” he means — so far as I can tell — native-born American citizens. But this demographic is not homogeneous. Indeed, the daughters of recent immigrants born in the United States are as much natives in this sense as are Daughters of the American Revolution. So who are those Yuengert means by “our poor”?

The second concern is somewhat acknowledged by Yuengert:

The plight of the native poor has many interrelated causes, and immigration may be the least important: family breakdown, a terrible educational system, free trade, and technological change have all contributed to the stagnation.

Indeed, I wouldn’t even include free trade on that list. The lost jobs most people blame on trade are actually due to automation. I tend to agree with Yuengert’s hypothetical prioritization that “immigration [is] the least important cause” of stagnating wages among the poor in the United States. Broken families and schools — in addition to other causes — matter far more. And robots.

If that is the case, as Yuengert himself suggests, I believe what is needed is not simply to question whether we have a duty to “our poor” before the poor of other nations who immigrate here looking for a better life. Whether we grant that or not, immigration restrictions aren’t likely to solve the problem. People need to be better informed about the real and most impactful causes of poverty in the United States, and the debate needs to be shifted to addressing those causes instead of the current focus on immigration. Indeed, increased immigration restriction may mean considerable losses for everyone in our economy, as Robert Carle has recently noted at Public Discourse.

Personally, I’m pro-robot but against broken families and schools. That’s easy to say, but automation does present real problems. As I’ve written in the past, I think the opportunities automation represents outweigh the short-term drawbacks. However, what to do about those who may be on the losing end of unevenly distributed benefits in the short-run is a discussion worth having. The problem of inadequate primary and secondary education is huge plicated, but also worth having. And the problem of broken families, again, is as important as it plex. We need solutions that address not only the ideal (two loving parents who are married and stay together) but also how best to handle the less-than-ideal (e.g. a single mother who escaped an abusive relationship and now needs to work two jobs to provide for her kids).

Unfortunately, blaming the immigrant among us for the multi-faceted problems of “our poor” does nothing to advance those much-needed conversations. Moreover, it does little to help “our poor,” whoever exactly they may be.

To be clear, I don’t think Yuengert is trying to scapegoat anyone — his reflection is, as I’ve already noted, challenging, well-nuanced, and thoughtful. I’d just like to hear him say more.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Death of Learning Breathes New Life into the Liberal Arts
The decline in education standards can be directly traced to a decline in respect for the lib-eral arts. But before they can be revived, one question must be answered: What exactly are they? Read More… For those of us who’ve devoted out lives to the liberal arts, it’s all mon to encounter doubters. As a high school English teacher, I encounter this all too frequently. Naturally, I’ve developed my own arguments, and because my interlocutors are teenagers, I’m usually successful...
New UK Report Slams CCP in Jimmy Lai Case
A parliamentary group has denounced the loss of press freedom in Hong Kong, even as the Chinese Communist Party insists freedom fighters like Lai are “doomed to fail.” Read More… As 75-year-old Jimmy Lai languishes in prison, the Hong Kong government, pressured by the Chinese Community Party (CCP), is dedicated to ensuring that the country’s most famous freedom fighter fails to win any further support for his cause. Lai’s story has spread across the world, and the regime currently holding...
Jimmy Lai Denied Counsel Yet Again as Power Shifts to Pro-CCP Exec
One more obstacle has been put in the way of securing justice for Hong Kong’s most famous and outspoken voice for freedom. Read More… Jimmy Lai is Hong Kong’s most persecuted freedom fighter. Jailed in December 2020 for the crime of protesting the Chinese Communist Party’s clampdown on civil rights in Hong Kong, the 75-year-old fashion mogul and entrepreneur faces the possibility of life in prison if convicted of violating the CCP’s National Security Law, which took effect in June...
Reading Well for Your Spiritual Life
Jessica Hooten Wilson has produced a fascinating guide on how to turn reading into a spiritual practice that will enrich mind, soul, and character. Read More… Widespread literacy is taken for granted in America today. Our global economy, societal structures, professional success, and everyday activities depend upon our ability to read, even as our interest in reading books appears to be declining. Even among those of us who read as a pastime, we don’t always ask ourselves why or how...
What the Writers Strike Means for Entertainment Today
Hollywood has been hit with its first strike in 15 years, and it may not end the way the last one did. That doesn’t mean the writers don’t have a legitimate cause—or that audiences don’t deserve better than the rebooted and woke pap that studios have been serving up of late. Read More… Although most people probably haven’t noticed yet, there is a currently a writers strike happening in Hollywood. For the time being, the main programs affected have been...
The Genesis Paradigm vs. the Gender Paradigm
Professor and author Abigail Favale has built an academic career in gender studies and feminist literary criticism. Her latest book brings a wealth of experience and meditation on these subjects and provides both guidance for Christians and a potential source of vexation for enemies of the permanent things. Read More… Abigail Favale’s The Genesis of Gender: A Christian Theory presents a positive vision of gender as part of God’s good creation. She describes and responds to contemporary gender theory, showing...
Hollywood’s Lost Paradise
Award-winning playwright Jonathan Leaf has just published his debut novel, a modern noir filled with murder, mayhem, scandal, intrigue, drugs, sex cults—you know, the usual. Read More… Dreams can often turn into nightmares. And dreams in Hollywood are a special kind, as are the nightmares that can follow. One day you’re getting ready to audition for a role in a movie. You’re full of hope, depending of course on how much time you’ve spent among the crowd of overly aesthetic...
Are There Such Things as “Natural” Rights?
A new book by eminent legal philosopher Hadley Arkes, Mere Natural Rights, puts forth the case for the “self-evident truths” of “mere natural law” as the foundation of our constitutional system, without which “originalism” is doomed to failure as a coherent judicial philosophy. Read More… It is never out of season to recall James Wilson’s line that the purpose of the Constitution was not to invent new rights “by a human establishment,” but to secure and enlarge the rights we...
Engaging the Culture for Christ
A biography of Timothy J. Keller paints a picture of a man of many influences, many successes, many critics, and who will continue to influence the evangelical world for many years e. Read More… Billy Graham was often called “America’s Pastor.” Throughout the 20th century, few rivaled his spiritual influence over the nation. But as we slink into the 21st century, its seems that the pastor for our day is Timothy Keller. Collin Hansen, who serves as vice president of...
Jacques Maritain and Art for Beauty’s Sake
Today we remember a profound thinker who continues to remind us of the danger of instrumentalized art in the service of merely ideological ends—and the role of hospitality, personal influence, in the upholding of truth. Read More… On this particular day … we had just said to one another that if our nature was so unhappy as to possess only a pseudo-intelligence capable of everything but the truth, if, sitting in judgment on itself, it had to debase itself to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved