The U.S. once banned Chinese immigrants — and it paid an economic price
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Portrait of American Wong Kim Ark, 1904. He was denied re-entry to the United States in 1895 due to the Chinese Exclusion Act.
Interim Archives
In 1880, the Chinese were the biggest group of immigrants in the western U.S. But Sinophobic sentiments crystallized into racist policies and eventually the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. The rationale was that banning Chinese laborers would boost job opportunities for U.S.-born workers. Today, an economist explains how the Chinese exclusion laws affected the economies of western states and what it says about our current debate over immigration and jobs.
Read the working paper co-authored by Nancy Qian.
A digital scan of the photo album in the California Historical Society's collections is available here.
For more on this period of history, check out At America's Gates: Chinese Immigration during the Exclusion Era, 1882-1943 by Erika Lee.
Related episodes:
What's missing in the immigration debate (Apple / Spotify)
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