Site icon PlanningShop

Immigrant Entrepreneurs Your Students Can Look Up To

We’ve been hearing a lot about immigrants in the news lately—first with the election, then with the proposed wall, and now with the travel bans. Many of your students are immigrants themselves or the children of immigrants. After they graduate, they will start businesses—and likely at a high rate. That’s because—aside from you being a fantastic entrepreneurship professor—immigrants start businesses in the US at a higher rate than do non-immigrants.

Here’s why: A few years ago, I toured the neighborhood in Flatbush, Brooklyn, where my father grew up. My dad, Alex, was the son of hard-working, ambitious immigrants from Eastern Europe. Like most immigrants, they came to this shore seeking a better life for their children—more economic opportunity, more political and religious freedom.

Walking around my father’s old neighborhood was like taking a trip back in time—except these immigrants were from the Caribbean instead of Eastern Europe, black instead of white, and spoke with a different accent. But they were living much the same lives—students pouring over homework in the library, kids playing in front yards, parents going off to low-paying service jobs or starting their own small businesses. Clearly, America meant the same to them as it meant to my family. And I could clearly see that these children were our future doctors and lawyers—and the future of America.

Immigrants are America’s not-so-secret strength. Some immigrants come here to save their lives, like the children refugees from Honduras. In many countries, being gay is punishable by death. And in so many places, girls and women are not allowed to be educated or pursue careers. Most immigrants experience hardships—sometime death-defying hardships—to come here.

Throughout America’s history, most immigrants have been economic immigrants. They may come here for greater freedom or safety, but opportunity is generally the greatest motivation. (From Canada they come for the weather).

By being a welcoming place for immigrants, we make a bargain—they revitalize our country, and we give them a home—ideally, a welcoming home.

Immigrants overwhelmingly stick to their end of the deal. They bring us fresh, new ideas. They become our scholars. They win Olympic medals. They bring new food. They create businesses and even entire new industries. They keep America vital and competitive.

Here are just a few statistics on immigrants’ effect on business and job creation:

Think of some of the many immigrant entrepreneurs who have made America what it is today:

We are all—with the exception of native Americans—the descendants of immigrants. That’s something to celebrate with your students.

*Stat sources: immigrationpolicy.org

Exit mobile version