Affiliation:
1. Department of Agricultural Economics & Economics Montana State University Bozeman Montana USA
Abstract
AbstractImmigrants are vital to agricultural production in the United States, and nearly half the crop workforce is unauthorized. Previous attempts to reform the immigration system have not successfully legalized the farm workforce or caused substantive rise in farmworker incomes. Current proposed legislation would legalize unauthorized farmworkers, streamline the H‐2A agricultural guest worker program, and provide a pathway to citizenship for H‐2A workers while simultaneously requiring agricultural employers to check the immigration status of workers using E‐Verify. This paper discusses proposed farm labor legislation in the context of current farm labor market conditions, outcomes of historical farm labor and immigration policies, and ongoing immigration trends.
Reference65 articles.
1. Trends in U.S. Farm Labor and H‐2A Hired Labor: Policy and Related Issues;Bampasidou M.;Choices,2019
2. COVID‐19 and Farm Workers: Challenges Facing California Agriculture;Beatty T.;ARE Update,2020
3. Did the 2007 Legal Arizona Workers Act Reduce the State's Unauthorized Immigrant Population?
4. The Wage Impact of the Marielitos: A Reappraisal