In editing two papers on Asian American immigration for the Winter 2026 issue of the Journal of Economic Perspectives (where I work as Managing Editor), I found myself musing over two alternative histories: one about more such immigration, one about less.
Hannah Postel describes “Asian Immigration to the United States in Historical Perspective” (Journal of Economic Perspectives 40:1, 191–214) from the later decades of rhe 19th century up to the present. As she points out, Asians were the first group to be singled out for discriminatory treatment by US immigration laws, and the first to be excluded from immigrating. Postel writes:
The Chinese became a target of American racial animus and the nation’s first federal immigration laws during the late nineteenth century. By the 1870s, about 15,000 to 20,000 permanent Chinese immigrants were arriving each year … For perspective, the total US population in 1870 was about 38 million, or one-ninth its current level. The 1875 Page Act excluded Chinese women, thereby precluding Chinese family formation for almost a century. The 1882 Restriction Act limited future Chinese immigration to the United States and was extended in 1888 to “cut off circular Chinese migration, [pour] ten times the funding into enforcement, [eliminate] many avenues for fraud, and [develop] new systems of management and deportation” (Lew-Williams 2014, p. 27). New Chinese immigration then dropped to near-zero for decades. The Chinese immigrant population in the United States peaked at 106,688 in 1890, falling to a low of 45,757 in 1920.
US employers then turned to Japanese immigrants in the early 20th century, but that flow of immigration was shut down by a 1907 agreement, and then expanded to a continent-wide “barred zone” in 1917. The Phillipines had been ceded from Spain to the United States at the end of the 1898 Spanish-American war. By the early 1930s, more than 100,000 Filipinos had emigrated to Hawaii (which doesn’t become a US state until 1959) and another 30,000 had emigrated to California. This Asian immigration was then shut down by the 1934 Tydings-McDuffie Act, which as Postel writes “deemed Filipinos `foreign aliens’ subject to a quota of 50 new immigrants per year.”
Thus, my first alterate history is how the United States would have been shaped for several decades after the 1870s if the Asian exclusion laws had not been passed. For example, Asian immigration during this period would surely have been much larger. The population of west coast states like California (becomes a US state in 1850), Oregon (1859) and Washington (1889) might have grown much more rapidly. The share of seats for these states in the House of Representatives might have been substantially large, and the economies of the western states might have grown much more rapidly. The inherited cultural history of the western United States might have diverged substantially from US states that fought for the North during the US Civil War, as well as states that fought for the South.
The other paper in the JEP symposium by Gaurav Khanna, “From Asia, with Skills” (Journal of Economic Perspectives 40:1, 215–40) focuses on more recent experience of Asian American immigration. Overall, as Postel notes, “The Asian-identifying population is now nearly 8 percent of the US population, having more than doubled since 2000.” Khanna focuses on the insight that this wave of Asian American immigration has been predominantly high-skilled. He write:
Migration from countries in Asia in the last three decades or so—and especially China and India, as well as South Korea, the Philippines, and Japan—has occurred with unprecedented scale and impact. This wave of migration to the United States has been predominantly high-skill. In 2019, among working adults in the US labor force, 78 percent of Indian-born and 63 percent of Chinese-born workers held at least a four-year college degree, compared to 39 percent of US-born workers (ACS 2019). Between 1990 and 2019, the share of college-educated workers in the United States from these five Asian countries doubled to 7.3 percent. Over this period, migration from these countries contributed to over 38 percent of the growth in US employment of software developers, 25 percent of the increase in scientists and engineers, and 21 percent of the growth in physicians (ACS 2019).
Khanna goes into some detail about the conditions of demand for skilled workers in the US economy, the supply of skilled workers in these five Asian countries, greater economic opportunities in the US economy, changes in immigration laws since 1965, and other factors and events driving this change. My second alternative history involved musing about the shape of the US economy in recent decades if this supply of Asian immigration had remained highly constrained.
The overall picture of US colleges and universities would look rather different if international students from China and India had not increased by about 400,000 from 2007-2023. In technology fields, “In 2010, 27 percent of all foreign-born workers and 35 percent of foreign-born information technology workers in the United States initially arrived on a student visa. Asian-born students are heavily concentrated in science and engineering fields, such as computer science, engineering, and mathematics. … By 2010, one-third of US information technology workers were foreign-born, predominantly from India. By 2019, Indian-born individuals were 29 percent of all workers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics jobs in the United States.”
In the area of entrepreneurship and corporate management, Khanna notes (citations omitted):
Asian-born immigrants have also played prominent roles in entrepreneurship, particularly Chinese and Indian immigrants in the tech sector. In the late 1990s, Chinese- and Indian born engineers were running one out of every four US tech startups, and a similar fraction had at least one immigrant founder. More generally, immigrants are twice as likely to start new businesses as natives. In 2023, 44.8 percent of US Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants (from anywhere in the world) or their children (AIC 2023); in 2022, 55 percent of America’s `unicorn’ startups (privately held startups with total stock market capitalization over $1 billion) had an immigrant founder. As of 2024, chief executive officers of giants like Google, Microsoft, Adobe, Cognizant, and IBM were born and educated in India. Indian-born CEOs of Fortune 500 companies are also found in other sectors of the economy, including technology (Micron Technology, Microchip Technology), consumer goods and retail (Starbucks, Chewy, Albertsons), technical services (FedEx, Cognizant, Honeywell, Jacobs Solutions), and pharmaceuticals (Vertex). … Looking ahead at the race for artificial intelligence startups, a recent analysis found that nearly two-thirds of the Forbes top 50 artificial intelligence startups had an immigrant founder, with Indian entrepreneurs leading the pack with 10 startups …
In the provision of health care, as Khanna notes, “In 2023, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges (2024), one in four active US physicians were international medical graduates. In 2016, migrants from Asia made up 17.7 percent of all US physicians and surgeons (Patel et al. 2018). Physicians are more likely to be from India, with recent growth in the number of physicians from China. The Philippines, on the other hand, is an important source of the nursing workforce in the United States. Just before the Covid-19 pandemic, there were 136,000 Filipino nurses and 78,000 Indian-born physicians in the United States. Migrants from Asia—and in particular, China, India, and the Philippines—represent 20 percent of the growth in the US physician population and 11 percent of the increase in the US nurse population between 1990 and 2019.”
When noting the actual contributions of immigrants to the US economy, one common response is along the lines that, if only the immigrants had not been here, those jobs would have been filled by native-born Americans. In some situations, for some jobs, I’m sure that’s true. But the opportunities and flexibility of the US economy is also a magnet for those with high skills from all over the world–including especially the two largest-population countries in the world of India and China. It does not seem to me that US medical schools, for example, have been standing by, ready and waiting to train massively more native-born doctors and nurses. I am dubious that a legion of native-born entrepreneurs or AI-talented managers have highly profitably business plans in hand–but are somehow being shut out by immigrants with skills in these areas.
Frankly, it doesn’t matter to me if potential native-born CEOs are displaced by immigrant talent. (I don’t spend much time worrying about the income and welfare of CEOs.) But there is strong evidence that new and successful companies increase the wage and job opportunities available to a wide swath of middle-class and lower-income workers, which matters to me a lot more. Asian American immigration seems clearly to be one reason why the sustained and solid growth of the US economy has in recent decades exceeded that of other high-income countries, like those in the European Union. I would be delighted to see the US education system, from K-12 and up through higher education, produce a sharp rise in the US share of high-skilled workers. A high-income economy is driven forward by high-skilled workers, and the more of them the better.

















