Fall 2024

Immigrant Contributions: Cornerstone of American Prosperity 

From the Set Current Topics by ReferencePoint Press

For more than two hundred years, immigrants have flocked to the United States in pursuit of freedom, opportunity, and equality. Although they have often been met with hostility, they have always played a vital part in contributing to the nation's economic and social prosperity. Supported by facts, statistics, quotes, and anecdotes, this book examines the role immigrants play in filling jobs, building communities, enriching American culture, and shaping the future.

Format List Price Your Price Qty
$45.26 $33.95
Interest Level Grade 6 - Grade 12
Reading Level Grade 6
Dewey Number 305.8
Lexile
ATOS Reading Level
Guided Reading Level
Language English
Publisher ReferencePoint Press
Format Reinforced book
ISBN 9781678208042
Copyright 2025
Number of Pages 64
Dimensions 6.5 x 9.25
Graphics Full-color photographs

Kirkus Review of Immigrant Contributions: Cornerstone of American Prosperity

Evidence of the many ways that immigrants are not a threat to, but rather a mainstay of, the U.S. economy.

Backing up the subtitle’s claim from the start, Sheen begins with two easily read pages of infographics on areas including taxes and spending, entrepreneurs, occupations, and the wage distribution of immigrants and native-born workers. Although she provides many relevant examples of documented immigrants’ contributions to U.S. productivity and prosperity, she also cites research showing that undocumented immigrants pay far more into the system than they extract from it: “over $30 billion in federal, state, and local taxes annually” that support public benefits they can’t utilize. Immigrants often perform “messy, physically demanding jobs” that otherwise would go unfilled by native-born workers. A brief history of immigration—and anti-immigrant abuses past and present—precedes an overview of immigrants’ contributions to building, revitalizing, and maintaining strong communities. The third chapter explores immigrants’ cultural contributions, explaining how they’ve both enriched the culture and stimulated the economy, for example, through celebrations like St. Patrick’s Day and Lunar New Year, as well as through ethnic food industries and pop culture. In the chapter entitled “Shaping the Future,” Sheen cites the examples of Jan Koum, the Ukrainian-born founder of WhatsApp, and Eric Yuan, the Chinese-born creator of Zoom, among others. Abundant color photos show diversity in race, gender, and religion.

A well-written, thoroughly supported, and accessible presentation of immigrants’ essential economic role. (picture credits, source notes, for further research, websites, index) (Nonfiction. 12-16)

Author: Barbara Sheen