HomeOpinionRecognize immigrants as powerful source of entrepreneurship, innovation

Recognize immigrants as powerful source of entrepreneurship, innovation

In tech, we live and breathe innovation and entrepreneurship. Tech-driven innovation, for all its challenges, keeps New Jersey’s economy thriving — and America’s. It means saving lives through new medicines and devices, empowering people to be more creative and independent, widening access to knowledge and culture. It’s crucial for reasons that go way beyond gross domestic product. But we rarely consider just how essential diversity and openness to foreigners are to tech innovation and entrepreneurship. We’d better — because these advantages are at risk.

Immigrants establish 27.5% of new businesses in the United States: more than twice their percentage of the population. Here in New Jersey — and also New York — immigrants create more than 40% of new businesses. You may know the high-profile examples of immigrant entrepreneurs: Google’s Sergey Brin, Tesla’s Elon Musk, Intel’s Andrew Grove, eBay’s Pierre Omidyar. But what about Slack, Peloton, Affirm, Avant, CrowdStrike, JetSmarter, Warby Parker, WeWork, PayPal, LinkedIn? All founded or co-founded by immigrants.

Attitudes towards immigration shape nations’ ability to benefit from their entrepreneurship. While recent polls actually show Americans becoming more supportive of immigration, what foreigners see in law, regulation and official pronouncements tells a different story. As Stuart Anderson writes in Forbes, it’s become harder to hire or retain high-skilled foreigners, including international students in STEM disciplines.

The current presidential administration also has canceled a new startup visa program in its infancy, relegating foreign entrepreneurs to a short-term “parole status” process typically limited to those here on humanitarian relief missions. While America was doing that, Canada launched and expanded its own Entrepreneur Start-up Visa program, and made it easier to welcome foreign high-tech talent.

Canada’s openness to innovative foreigners is helping grow its tech sector more broadly. As Fast Company recently reported, Toronto now hosts North America’s fourth-largest group of tech workers. Since 2017, it’s added more tech jobs than Silicon Valley, Washington, D.C., New York City and Seattle combined. In just the past several months, Uber, Microsoft, Samsung, Intel and Shopify have all announced expansions there — and Canada’s openness is a key reason.

Research suggests that entrepreneurial individuals are likelier to migrate: they’re the people most prepared to overcome the fears and challenges associated with building something new in an unfamiliar environment. But, as Peter Vandor and Nikolaus Franke recently wrote in Harvard Business Review, something else may be at work, too. Their research suggests that cross-cultural experiences help entrepreneurs identify promising business ideas to borrow and adapt for new markets. (Dietrich Mateschitz visits Thailand, sees an inexpensive energy drink, returns home and invents Red Bull.)

The implication: Even companies that operate primarily within the U.S. can benefit from immigration, by continually leveraging the experiences and insights of colleagues born elsewhere — if given the chance.

America’s history reflects a constant tension between welcoming foreigners and keeping them out. That’s not new. Neither is the proclivity of immigrants to create new companies: AT&T and Pfizer were each created by 19th century immigrants. But, we’ve eventually had the confidence to recognize openness as one of America’s most valuable differentiators. The sooner we do so again — in both attitudes and public policy — the better off we’ll be.

James Barrood, New Jersey Tech Council.

Related Articles

C5i to acquire U.K.-based Datavid, strengthening agentic AI solutions

AI and analytics company C5i, headquartered in Edison, announced that it is acquiring Datavid, a data and AI company that helps organizations transform fragmented,...

Capacity appoints Sharma to chief information officer

North Brunswick-based Capacity LLC, a leading fulfillment and logistics provider for high-growth consumer brands, announced that Shatabdi Sharma has joined the company as chief...

Climb and Checkmk partner to expand monitoring and observability offerings

Climb, an international specialty technology distributor and a wholly owned subsidiary of Climb Global Solutions, Inc., with a U.S. office in Eatontown, announced a...

New Jersey is 2026’s 10th most innovative state, based on WalletHub report   

State leaders such as former Gov. Phil Murphy were happy to tout New Jersey as the “Innovation State.” Turns out a new report provides...

Verisk study: AI image edits are accelerating digital insurance claims fraud

AI-powered photo and document editing tools are making insurance fraud easier to commit and harder to detect, according to new research commissioned by Verisk. The...

Wipro partners with Harness to accelerate AI-native software delivery

Wipro Limited, a leading AI-powered technology services and consulting company with a U.S. office in New Brunswick, and Harness, the AI Software Delivery Platform...

Latest Articles

Porzio Bromberg adds ex-Homeland Security counsel d’Agincourt to employment, education team

Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., a multidisciplinary law firm, said March 19 it added Gregory V. d’Agincourt as an attorney on the firm’s employment...

Rutgers Business School revamps MBA in professional accounting

Rutgers Business School announced that it has revamped its graduate degree in professional accounting to equip students with the skills demanded by an industry...

NAI James E. Hanson hire of Kretowicz as senior vice president boosts health care practice

Commercial real estate firm NAI James E. Hanson said on March 20 that Kim Kretowicz was hired as senior vice president and was designated...

B&G Foods completes deal for College Inn and Kitchen Basics brands

B&G Foods Inc. announced on March 19 that it has completed the acquisition of the broth and stock business of Del Monte Foods Corporation...

Rowan University opens new Virtua Health College Research Center

Rowan University marked a major milestone in its research enterprise as leaders from Rowan, Virtua Health and local government gathered to cut the ribbon...

ROI-NJ: Women of Inspiration – Dina Opici, president, Opici Family Distributing

A family tradition When Dina Opici enters the building and heads for her office at Opici Wines & Spirits in Glen Rock, New Jersey, she represents the fourth generation of the...

Latest Articles

Porzio Bromberg adds ex-Homeland Security counsel d’Agincourt to employment, education team

Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, P.C., a multidisciplinary law firm, said March 19 it added Gregory V. d’Agincourt as an attorney on the firm’s employment...

Rutgers Business School revamps MBA in professional accounting

Rutgers Business School announced that it has revamped its graduate degree in professional accounting to equip students with the skills demanded by an industry...

NAI James E. Hanson hire of Kretowicz as senior vice president boosts health care...

Commercial real estate firm NAI James E. Hanson said on March 20 that Kim Kretowicz was hired as senior vice president and was designated...

B&G Foods completes deal for College Inn and Kitchen Basics brands

B&G Foods Inc. announced on March 19 that it has completed the acquisition of the broth and stock business of Del Monte Foods Corporation...

Rowan University opens new Virtua Health College Research Center

Rowan University marked a major milestone in its research enterprise as leaders from Rowan, Virtua Health and local government gathered to cut the ribbon...