Job growth recovered in April, according to data released Friday by the Labor Department. An impressive 211,000 jobs were created last month, pushing the unemployment rate down to 4.4%—the lowest in more than 10 years. The bad news, unreported in the Main Stream Media: immigrants captured all of that gain, and then some. And the immigrant share of the workforce rebounded. This abruptly erases what had appeared to be one of the Trump Administration’s few tangible successes —perhaps temporarily, but what’s going on?

Note that economists claim to be perplexed that strong job growth has gone on for as long as it has without out triggering strong wage growth. (Wages rose a mediocre 0.3% in April.) The “other” employment survey, of households rather than employers, provides a likely answer: Renewed displacement of native-born American workers by immigrants (legal and illegal) willing to work for less.

In April:

Total employment rose 156,000, up by 0.10%

156,000, up by 0.10% Native-born American employment fell 260,000, down by 0.20%

260,000, down by 0.20% Foreign-born employment rose by 416,000, up by 1.60%

Foreign-born workers held 17.20% of all jobs in April—up from 16.94% in March. This undoes the gains made during Trump’s first two months, when immigrants appeared to be retreating from the labor force. (Over February and March native-born Americans gained 986,000 jobs while immigrants lost 67,000.)

Not since the election has the immigrant share of jobs been at April levels.

Depressingly, we are back to the long-term trend. Native-born American workers lost ground to their foreign-born competitors throughout the Obama years, and this trend accelerated significantly in the months leading up to the election. The displacement of Americans by immigrants, which we measure by the extent by which immigrants have gained jobs at a faster pace than the native-born Americans since January 2009, hit an Obama-Era high in August 2016.

Now that trend is still unbroken, as brought out in our New VDARE.com American Worker Displacement Index (NVDAWDI) graphic:

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Native-born American employment growth is represented by the black line, immigrant employment growth is in pink, and NVAWDI—the ratio of immigrant to native-born American job growth—is in yellow.

The index starts at 100.0 in January 2009 for both immigrants and native-born Americans, and tracks their employment growth since then.

From January 2009 through April 2017:

Immigrant employment rose by 4.689 million, or by 21.7%. The immigrant employment index rose from 100.0 to 121.7.

Native-born American employment rose by 6.246 million, up by 5.2%. The native-born American employment index rose from 100.0 to 105.2.

NVDAWDI (the ratio of immigrant to native-born employment growth indexes) rose from 100.0 to 115.7. (100X (121.7/105.2))

During the 96 months of Barack Obama’s tenure, immigrant employment rose 4.2 times faster than native-born American employment—19.8% versus 4.7%.

With April’s surge in immigrant employment, Trump’s brief tenure is also marked by an overall increase in native-born American worker displacement. From January through April immigrant employment grew more than twice as rapidly as native-born employment: 1.3% versus 0.6%.

The key variable in the displacement story: the foreign-born share of total U.S. employment. This rose steadily, albeit erratically, throughout the Obama years and, after falling in Trump’s first two full months, roared back to pre-election levels in April.

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In February 2009, Barack Obama’s first full month in office, 14.97% of all persons working in the U.S. were foreign-born. In his last full month, December 2016, 17.05% of workers were foreign-born. This implies that Obama-era immigration pushed as many as 3.16 million native-born Americans onto the unemployment rolls.

Last month we estimated the mere threat of a Trump immigration crackdown may have put 168,000 native-born American workers back to work. This was actually quite plausible, given the hysteria about Trump in the MSM. Some immigrants, legal and illegal, may have decided to leave. Others, above all illegals, may have decided not to come after all.

But this month, the immigrant share of employment in April 2017 (17.20%) has rebounded to 0.15% points above the share in Obama’s last month. This implies that Trump’s failure to get a grip on immigration may have put as many as 24,000 native-born Americans out of work.

A detailed snapshot of American worker displacement over the past year is seen in the Employment Status of the Civilian Population by nativity table published in the monthly BLS Report. [PDF]

Employment Status by Nativity, April 2016-April 2017 (numbers in 1000s; not seasonally adjusted) Apr-16 Apr-17 Change % Change Foreign born, 16 years and older Civilian population 40,797 41,567 770 1.89% Civilian labor force 26,596 27,402 806 3.03% Participation rate (%) 65.2 65.9 0.7%pts. 1.07% Employed 25,460 26,354 894 3.51% Employment/population % 62.4 63.4 1.0%pts. 1.60% Unemployed 1,137 1,049 -88 -7.74% Unemployment rate (%) 4.3 3.8 -0.5%pts. -11.63% Not in labor force 14,200 14,165 -35 -0.25% Native born, 16 years and older Civilian population 212,172 213,021 849 0.40% Civilian labor force 131,891 132,415 524 0.40% Participation rate (%) 62.2 62.2 0.0%pts. 0.00% Employed 125,615 126,908 1,293 1.03% Employment/population % 59.2 59.6 0.4%pts. 0.68% Unemployed 6,276 5,507 -769 -12.25% Unemployment rate (%) 4.8 4.2 -0.6%pts. -12.50% Not in labor force 80,281 80,606 325 0.40% Source: BLS, The Employment Situation-April 2017, Table A-7, May 5, 2017. PDF

Over the last 12 months (April 2016 to April 2017):

The foreign-born labor force grew seven-times faster than the native-born labor force: 3.03% versus 0.40%. ADVANTAGE IMMIGRANTS

Immigrant employment rose 894,000, up 3.51%, while native-born American employment rose 1.29 million, up 1.03%. ADVANTAGE IMMIGRANTS

The labor-force participation rate (LPR), a sign of worker confidence, rose by 0.7% points for immigrants but remained unchanged for native-born Americans. At 65.9%, the immigrant LPR in April was considerably above that of the native-born (62.2%.) ADVANTAGE IMMIGRANTS

The number of unemployed native-born Americans fell by 769,000 down 12.3%; the number of unemployed immigrants dropped 88,000, off by 7.8%. A DVANTAGE NATIVE-BORN

The population data mirrors the employment surge. After a sharp post-election downtrend, April saw a strong rebound in year-over-year growth:

Change in Foreign-born population from same month prior year (age 16+; in 1,000s; BLS data) July 2016 1,176 Aug. 2016 1,478 Sept. 2016 1,471 Oct. 2016 1,711 Nov. 2016 1,545 Dec. 2016 886 Jan. 2017 351 Feb. 2017 177 Mar. 2017 56 Apr. 2017 770

The immigrant working age population appears to have surged by 770,000 between April 2016 and April 2017. Note that this is still smaller than the 900,000-1 million figure commonly cited as the annual legal influx of all ages. That could mean that the “Trump Effect” is still alive, albeit attenuated, in April. Prior to the election immigrant workforce growth regularly exceeded estimated legal inflow, evidence of the surge of illegal immigration that occurred in Obama’s last year.

(Of course, the foreign-born are only the tip of the immigration iceberg. The true measure of post-1965 immigration impact on the labor market and population would include their U.S.-born children. My estimate: factoring in U.S.-born children virtually doubles immigration’s depression of American wages).

What is happening? Frankly, we are disappointed and surprised by April’s sudden deterioration. The positive trend in American worker displacement and immigrant workforce share had been in place for several months—actually since the election—and was backed by significant anecdotal evidence.

This deterioration could be what statisticians call “noise”—the tendency of data to vary randomly around a major trend. Or it could be that panic among illegals is fading—perhaps because they’ve noted the frustration of Trump’s Executive Orders by rogue federal judges and, of course, the GOP-controlled Congress’ total failure to pass any measure of patriotic immigration reform.

It’s possible the positive trend could resume. But, ultimately, the Trump Administration must act if it is to cut immigration to tighten the labor market and reward its key supporters.

Edwin S. Rubenstein (email him) is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants.