The politicians insisted for years that the border crisis was somehow good for the economy. They claimed millions of illegal migrants would solve labor shortages, keep inflation down, and somehow make America stronger. Now even a Federal Reserve study is acknowledging what ordinary Americans have been living through every single day. The damage was real, measurable, and far more significant than Washington was willing to admit.
A new working paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas examined the unprecedented wave of unauthorized immigration between 2021 and 2024. According to the Congressional Budget Office, roughly 7 million unauthorized migrants were added to the U.S. population during that period, averaging about 1.75 million people annually. That was nearly double the pace of legal immigration and represented the largest surge in modern history.
The study found that these inflows accounted for roughly 30% of employment growth, approximately 30% of home-price appreciation, and about 20% of rent increases across the average metropolitan area between March 2021 and March 2024. Those are the Federal Reserve’s own findings—rent increased an alarming 20% due to mass migration.
The economists determined that every 1% increase in unauthorized workers relative to a local labor force produced roughly a 1% increase in total employment, but there was virtually no expansion in housing supply to accommodate that population growth. Instead, every 1% increase in unauthorized workers corresponded with approximately a 2.2% rise in home prices and a 1.4% increase in rents. That is precisely what anyone with common sense would expect. You cannot inject millions of additional people into already constrained housing markets and pretend prices will remain stable. Supply simply could not keep pace with demand.
The report also found little evidence that average wages declined, which will undoubtedly be seized upon by politicians. Yet that misses the larger point entirely. The study found labor income per capita declined while government transfers fell. More importantly, Americans were competing for housing in markets where construction could not expand fast enough. Families trying to purchase their first home or simply renew a lease paid the price. The issue was never simply wages. It was purchasing power. If housing costs explode faster than incomes, people become poorer regardless of what their paycheck says.
This is exactly how governments create inflation without ever printing a single additional housing unit. They expand demand through policy while ignoring the supply side of the equation. Washington spent years insisting inflation was caused by corporate greed, supply chains, or anything else convenient while refusing to acknowledge that adding millions of people into an already undersupplied housing market would inevitably push prices higher. Economics is not ideology. It is mathematics.
This entire episode demonstrates the danger of allowing politicians to ignore basic economic principles in pursuit of ideology. Governments cannot continue expanding populations while restricting housing development, burdening builders with regulation, inflating construction costs, and expecting affordability to improve. Every action has a consequence. The bill always arrives eventually, and it is ordinary citizens who end up paying it.
