Skilled immigrants being pushed into a shadow workforce

CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES — The Trump administration’s termination of Temporary Protected Status across 13 countries has already cost 600,000 working adults their legal right to earn a paycheck in the United States — pushing accountants, nurses, and financial service professionals into off-the-books employment far below their qualifications, Staffing Industry reports.
Legal status has become the threshold between formal careers and the shadow economy
“In most cases, these people are not going to leave the country. They’ll likely stay and swell the ranks of the undocumented immigrant population,” said Pia Orrenius, labor economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
FWD.us estimates 3 million skilled workers in the U.S. labor force could lose work authorization by year-end.
Skilled immigrants already represent a structural skills mismatch — 2 million highly-skilled immigrants in the U.S. are currently underemployed or unemployed, earning an average of $35,000 a year against the $80,000 they would command in their qualified roles.
The credential gap is structural — and the shadow economy can’t close it
Orrenius noted that the immediate threat for workers losing legal status is not deportation but the right to earn a paycheck — and that many would remain in the country taking informal jobs far below their qualification level.
Twenty-five percent of highly-skilled immigrants with foreign degrees already face skill underutilization in the U.S. — a rate that rises steeply once TPS loss removes the legal framework enabling credentialed employment.
Thirty-five percent of Filipino professional workers already experience skill underutilization in the US — among the highest rates by national origin — making Filipino workers disproportionately exposed to the talent loss the Bloomberg investigation maps.
Skill underutilization across the skilled immigrant population already costs the US $39.4 billion in annual wages — a figure that grows as shadow employment absorbs workers who can no longer be formally hired.
The story underneath the immigration enforcement headline is a skills-waste story: the US is converting credentialed accountants, nurses, and legal professionals into an underground workforce that cannot be taxed, insured, or deployed at the level their qualifications represent.
For BPO and offshore staffing providers, the shadow workforce phenomenon is a clear market signal. The professional services these displaced workers — accountants, paralegals, healthcare administrators — provided legally in U.S. offices are exactly the services offshore BPO teams in the Philippines deliver in documented, contractually governed arrangements.
As U.S.-based talent pipelines for these functions become legally unstable, buyers looking for documented, AI-trained professional delivery at scale have a straightforward alternative — one that does not depend on immigration policy.

Independent




