Ohio has experienced population decline but one city is growing: Columbus. Peter Gill of the Columbus Dispatch explains that new immigrants have fueled population growth and the local economy.
He writes:
Kikandi Lukambo has reinvented himself many times in his life.
After war forced him, his parents and siblings to flee their home in the Congo, he became a tailor, catering to the fashionable ladies of Kampala, the Ugandan capital.
Nearly a decade later, in 2015, the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program resettled Lukambo in Columbus. He quickly found a job with a perfume manufacturer, then at a distribution warehouse.
Recently, he founded a transportation business that shuttles other immigrant workers — including people from Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria and elsewhere — to and from their workplaces in Greater Columbus.
Sitting in Kivu Transportation Services’ small office in the Northland neighborhood recently, Lukambo, 37, spoke of his gratitude for the opportunities Ohio has afforded him.
“(Ohio) has a very good reputation of employment,” he said. “We have the best life here.”
Lukambo, who became an American citizen in 2022, also found love locally. Four months ago, he and his fiancée Wedny Dauphin, an immigrant from Haiti, became parents to a baby boy.
Foreign-born people like Lukambo and Dauphin have been essential to Columbus’ population growth and economy in recent years, according to new government data and local economists.
Because native-born Americans are having fewer children and are moving away from Ohio, the state’s population shrunk by about 13,000 between mid-2020 and mid-2023. But it would have shrunk by about 61,000 more if it weren’t for the flow of immigrants moving in, according to Census Bureau estimates.
In Columbus — Ohio’s fastest-growing metro area— international immigrants accounted for more than half of the population growth over the three years, according to the bureau.
This includes everyone from refugees like Lukambo to high-skill workers on H-1B visas, people admitted based on family ties and undocumented individuals. Franklin County’s largest foreign-born groups come from Asia, followed by Africa and then Latin America.
Mark Partridge, an urban economist at Ohio State University, told The Dispatch that population expansion comes with certain growing pains, such as greater demand for housing and public services like schools.
But he said immigrant-driven population growth is a “first-order factor” benefitting the region’s economy — in contrast to shrinking cities like Youngstown, where relatively few immigrants settle.
“Population growth drives demand for businesses. … And (likewise), population growth (increases) the supply of workers that firms want to hire,” he said.
“It’s easy to scapegoat immigrants. … However, if it wasn’t for immigration in a state that struggles retaining population like Ohio, we would have much faster population loss. Once you start losing population, it’s pretty easy to turn into a vicious cycle downward.”

Lukambo had never driven a car before moving to the U.S. nine years ago. Soon after arrival, he and his brother paid another Congolese refugee $1,000 to teach them how to drive so they could get to work, he said.
While his job at a warehouse provided some stability, Lukambo dreamed of starting his own business. At first, he thought of starting a language school for other immigrants, since he speaks English fluently. But then he realized that very few of his potential students would have a means of transportation to get to class. This insight led him to start the transportation company, which now has contracts with a sawmill in Newark, the refugee resettlement agency Jewish Family Services and elsewhere.
Lukambo and Dauphin drive vans for their company while also working other jobs — Lukambo is a weekend supervisor at a Macy’s warehouse in Groveport, and Dauphin works for Cheryl’s Cookies in Westerville.
“I don’t really take time off,” Lukambo, who works seven days a week, said with a chuckle.
Bill LaFayette, an economist who owns the local consulting firm Regionomics, told The Dispatch that immigrants are good for the economy in part because Columbus-area firms are in desperate need of workers.
“Our employment growth has been somewhat stunted since mid-2022, just because there aren’t enough workers,” LaFayette said. “(Immigrants) tend to be younger than the population as a whole, and they tend to be more likely in the labor force.”
LaFayette said that immigrants are also significantly more likely than native-born people to become entrepreneurs.
“My guess is that (is because) they have pulled up stakes and moved to a completely different part of the world, and they are inherently risk-takers,” he said.
He pointed to Morse Road as an area with an abundance of immigrant-owned businesses, which he said retain a greater percentage of their sales revenue within the local economy than national chains.
Studies also show that immigrants are a boon to the local tax base.
In 2019, immigrants in the Columbus metro area paid $712.4 million in state and local taxes, according to a study commissioned by the city of Columbus and Franklin County.
And a new study by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that refugees and asylees contribute more on average in tax revenue than they cost in expenditures to federal, state and local governments.
LaFayette said immigrants contribute to the growing demand for affordable housing in Columbus, but this is an inevitable byproduct of economic growth — no matter where workers are coming from.
“Whether you come from Cleveland or Calcutta, you still need a place to live,” he said.
Skeptics of immigration sometimes raise concerns about immigrants taking jobs away from native-born people, but LaFayette said this is not a concern in central Ohio, at least not right now.
“Our unemployment rate’s barely above 3%. … All you’ve got is pretty much frictional unemployment — people going from one job to another,” he said. “We need everybody we can get.”
Another criticism is that even if immigrants do not take jobs away from native-born Americans, by expanding the labor pool, they can drive down wages in certain fields.
Partridge, the Ohio State professor, said economists still debate the size of this effect, though most agree it is small. He believes that low-wage workers are most affected, but “it’s not a massive effect.” On the other hand, he said immigrants often come up with innovations or insights that help firms expand into markets abroad — boosting wages for high-skill workers.
As Columbus’ foreign-born population continues to grow, Lukambo hopes to expand his business by partnering with more employers and by offering driving classes for newly arrived immigrants.
“I’m under obligation to help other people — because I don’t like to see people struggling the way I struggled with at the beginning when I came here,” he said.
Lukambo said many of his relatives and friends from his refugee camp in Uganda resettled elsewhere in the U.S. But when they come to visit Columbus, he makes the pitch for them to relocate here — which, increasingly, they accept.
“(Congolese) people used to say, ‘Ohio is like a village. Ohio is not a really good state.’ But with time … a lot of refugees and a lot of immigrants are coming here. … With the economy, you can be at least successful with one job, and you manage your time and you feel like you are having a good life,” he said.
“Ohio is growing.”
Peter Gill covers immigration and new American communities for The Dispatch in partnership with Report for America. You can support work like his with a tax-deductible donation to Report for America here:bit.ly/3fNsGaZ.
pgill@dispatch.com

Diane Ravitch continues her support for open borders, which she claims she does not support. Which people who enter the country without legal permission do you support deporting?
This sentence in the Columbus newspaper negates the conclusions of this “study” about the alleged current benefits of bringing in low-skilled, minimally educated, low-income people: “The period does not include recent years, when use of the asylum system has increased dramatically, with asylum-seekers filling up shelters in cities like New York.”
Cue the pro- open borders fanatic who always posts Brookings studies as if they are Holy Gospel or laws of science that are irrefutable. They’re not.
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I tend to agree with what the Holy Gospel has to say about immigrants and refugees.
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Amen
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I take your point but I’d rather not use scripture to set immigration policy.
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I do not support open borders. I do not know anyone who does. I support legal immigration.
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Take your idiotic, uninformed, knuckle-dragging, racist bs hate speech elsewhere. Thank you.
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Gee Bob tell us how you really feel.
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We wouldn’t want racist ideologues to become confused by facts not gleaned from the Reich-wing memosphere, would we?
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There are treatments and even cures for fear of brown and black people, like coming to know some. ROFL. For really severe cases, there are deprogramming facilities run by trained psychologists and psychiatrists.
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Yes, and speaking as one who lived in Columbus from ’57 to ’89, it’s a LOT more interesting city today! As I’ve experienced it, Columbus has grown from a big, Midwestern “small” city, to a BIG CITY. Not all of the good changes are the result of immigration, but that has been a major part. For instance, you can now get good Mexican food a lot of different places in the city–in the ’60’s there was only one such place. And now there’s cuisine from many parts of the world. Columbus is a great place to visit–and you might want to stay!
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An editorial from the Washington Post on related matters:
Opinion | Immigrant asylum seekers can revive Rust Belt cities in the heartland – The Washington Post
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After decades of working with immigrant parents, I am impressed by their diligence and appreciation for having the opportunity to raise their children here. Unfortunately, some of them become victims of some unscrupulous employers in this country that fail to pay them, put them to work in unsafe conditions and take advantage of their tenuous circumstances. Most of them are resilient and determined to make their way here. Since they often have a hard time finding gainful employment, they often become self-employed, and successful immigrants become entrepreneurs that truly overcome the odds and pull themselves up, without support from wealthy relatives, and become job creators.
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My son-in-law is an immigrant who has been here since 2000. During this time he has been a miner, a cook, a shift manager at a restaurant, an owner of a landscaping company and an independent trucker. He is ambitious, clever and resourceful. He can fix almost anything. He is also a caring husband and father, and he has paid taxes ever since he came here.
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I am the daughter of immigrants. They came here with no skills and they didn’t speak English. They worked hard and never took a dime from the government.
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The White supremacists read this and see all their deepest fears are coming true: immigrants – people not like us – come, stay, become successful by dint of self-sacrifice and hard work.
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That’s a mentally lazy reply that is common among uninformed people. Until around 2008 – the election of Obama – most prominent Democrats (including Obama) used to say that we need restrictions on immigration because of mass immigration’s effects on public assistance programs and the downward pressure on wages for lower-skilled citizens. You obviously don’t know that history, just as 99% of this blog’s readers don’t.
https://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video?fr=mcafee&p=senator+obama+on+illegal+immigration+in+2005&type=E210US739G0#id=1&vid=e3642cc3b2af6380501ef614fb3be4d5&action=click
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Try data, instead of calling me lazy and uninformed.
https://www.cbpp.org/research/immigrants-contribute-greatly-to-us-economy-despite-administrations-public-charge-rule
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So a left-wing site that supports open borders claims to refute basic math. Low income people – citizens or not – receive far more in public beneits than they pay in taxes. That’s inevitable in a progressive income tax system – it’s designed that way on purpose. Once all the illegal immigrants become citizens – the Democratic objective – they will qualify for all public assistance programs and become even more of a fiscal drain. Highly educated, high skilled immigrants are a net benefit the economy; lower-skilled, low-income immigrants are not. Canada knows this reality, which is why their immigration laws have long prioritized high skilled immigrants. Admit it: you did not know this fact, either.
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Barry Commoner, your willingly BS ignorance is off the charts.
How many US citizens can trace their roots to immigrants?
The population of the US is more than 330,000,000.
There’s less than three million indigenous native people whose ancestors lived here before all those immigrants invaded their land that they occupied for the last 15,000 years or more.
To erase that ignorance, here’s a suggested I don’t think you’ll take.
Run a Google search and ask, “How do immigrants contribute to the US economy?”
I just did and ended up with almost 80 million results. I scrolled down the first page and stopped at this one due to the source.
“Benefits of Immigration Outweigh the Costs”
SOURCE: George W. Bush Institute.
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These posts sure do bring out the brainless racists, don’t they?
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But the racists ideologues are immune to actual information. They have a hard coating of dried bullshit from years of standing downwind of Tucker Carlson.
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A left-wing site. Is that Reich-sprache for one that presents information instead of a flowing sewer of hate speech and ignorance born of fear?
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I am sure most of our ancestors did not arrive here as high dollar assets. Most of our ancestors were among the “huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”
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Oh, and btw, troll who chooses someone else’s name, Christine Langhoff is one of the least intellectually lazy people I know. She’s brilliant and deeply learned.
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Now, now Bob; don’t make me blush.
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I don’t know who this commenter is but THE Barry Commoner died in 2012.
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THE Barry Commoner was a great, great person.
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Christine Langhoff
All true but as with any policy there are winners and losers. Immigrants do supply additional labor. Labor shortages ie. Covid create the circumstances for increased wages. But the question to be asked is : Is this a factor of immigration or of Labor Law. When employers are able to undercut wages of native workers they will. Yet I doubt that any of our Congressional legislators who pretend to be populist voted for the Pro Act that would have empowered Unions ability to organize even the undocumented. Their Populism does not extend to actual workers.
Now in his defense many employers who hire the undocumented do so cash off the books failing to collect Federal State and Local taxes as they undercut local wages. So he would be correct that undocumented immigration is a drain on social services. Even if only from a revenue side. But again it is a decision to go after the employee and not the owner. Especially in smaller businesses. The local bodega that hires an immigrant off the books, more likely than not also cheats on his sales and income tax payments, while certainly collecting the Tax.
The construction company who exploits immigrants likely skirts local wage ,safety and environmental regulations. The most notable case is Trump who through a sub contractor hired 200 undocumented Polish immigrates to remove asbestos as he demolished Bonwit Teller to make room for Trump Tower. With no concern for the workers or the citizens exposed. (Only to become President and then try to undermine the EPA)
So while we can say that net, immigration is a positive for society socially and economically. There are losers but this is not a product of the “Law of Nature and Nature’s God,” These are policy decisions.
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You can show them the Justice Department statistics showing that undocumented immigrants have very close to the lowest crime rates of ANY subgroup in our population, and they will still fantasize that we are being inundated by rapists and murderers. This is, at root, cowardice. Fear of the Other.
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Studies from reputable sources keep finding that immigrants are major economic engines, and not from the crimes generated from the likes of Traitor Trump and his family.
This is a pull quote the first hit from the Google search I just ran.
“In fact, immigrants contribute to the U.S. economy in many ways. They work at high rates and make up more than a third of the workforce in some industries. Their geographic mobility helps local economies respond to worker shortages, smoothing out bumps that could otherwise weaken the economy.”
Immigrants Contribute Greatly to U.S. Economy, Despite Administration’s “Public Charge” Rule Rationale | Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (cbpp.org)
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These people who come here, fleeing violence and poverty to protect and support their families, enduring enormous hardship to do so, and then, once here, working incredibly hard and contributing to making this a stronger, richer, more diverse, more perfect union, are the definition of noble in my book, unlike the lazy, idiot, reactionary, cretinous, hateful, intolerant, immigrant-descended ‘merkins who spew their uninformed vitriol. I wish there were a way to import the former and deport the latter. The country would be far, far, far better for it.
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Agreed!
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Bob Shepherd – as always – hurls accusations of racism when he can’t make rational arguments for his pro-open borders beliefs. Here’s a basic question that he and other commenters here will evade every which way they can.
Why prior to 2008 did almost all prominent Democrats say that the U.S. cannot allow in all people who want to come here? Those Democrats noted the huge costs in public assistance for low-skilled, low-income migrants: public education, ER care, housing, food, etc. We’re seeing those costs right now in NYC, Denver, and other sanctuary cities. If those low-ncome migrants become citizens, they will qualify for even more public programs, and whatever meager taxes they pay won’t come close to paying for those benefits, i.e. the same as for all low-income citizens.
Those Democrats all noted the negative impact on low-income citizens when they had to compete for jobs with migrants willing to take lower wages. It’s all there in the public record no matter how much left-wing media try to hide the facts.
Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer, and dozens of other prominent Democrats. Bob Shepherd is calling all of them racists, xenophobes, haters, and all the other childish insults he can think of.
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I am done with providing evidence to racist trolls. It’s an utterly fruitless exercise. I put in a lot of work presenting the facts, and they make zero difference to the ideologues. It’s a waste of my valuable time.
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You are justified in not debating further. Your arguments are purely based on emotion, not rational economics. You don’t respond to my citations of what prominent Democrats used to say about massive immigration because you have no sensible reply, just lazy accusations of racism.
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“Your arguments are purely based on emotion, not rational economics.”
I have presented my arguments again and again and again here. I am sick of trying to explain the realities of this to you ideologues. I’m done. It is a waste of my time.
As opposed to “irrational economics”? ROFL. Did you major in irrational economics at Trump University? LOL
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And I am certainly not responsible for what idiot Democrats have said on this issue in the pasts. I have been quite clear on these pages about what I think of Bill and Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama. These people were and are despicable.
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These information-free racist trolls infuriate me because I have so much respect for our immigrants. Imagine how these creeps’ lives would be transformed by actually coming to know some immigrants–how the deserts of their hearts would bloom.
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Meanwhile, Thank You again to the Central American men who died repairing the Baltimore Francis Scott Key Bridge.
And yesterday’s Washington Post ran this great piece.
The Washington Post spoke with more than 15 Venezuelan MOPED DRIVERS about their growing, not-so-underground economy. Delivering food for companies like DoorDash and Uber has become a lifeline for many of D.C.’s Venezuelans, some of whom were among the more than 13,000 migrants Republican governors have bused to the city since 2022.
As they pursue the months-long process of claiming asylum and applying for work permits, many immigrants have leaned on food delivery to stay afloat financially.
WAPO 4/21/24
“They fled Venezuela — and transformed D.C.’s food delivery scene”
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Thank you, Kathy!!!!
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Stoking fear of the Other–of foreigners and immigrants–among the poorly educated and/or ignorant via fabricated accusations and disinformation has always been a go-to propaganda technique among Fascists. This is, for them, tried and true. With that in mind, it’s interesting, isn’t it, that whenever immigration comes up on this blog, a slew of Reich wingers comes onto the page, spouting the same bs that has been refuted here again and again and again and again.
I suspect that this is not an accident. The Reichwing in America really needs the immigration issue, and it is very well funded because of money from oligarchs like that recently left to Leonard Leo and his group of extremists.
I think that what we are seeing is part of a well-funded disinformation mechanism–people paid by wealthy Reichwingers to play whack-a-mole anytime anyone actually presents anything true about immigration and its value to our country.
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Suddenly, out of nowhere, they are there. Every time. And always with the same bs. For years, I have countered their claims with actual evidence. To no avail. It’s like trying to explain calculus to a bullfrog.
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Paid trolls do not have to be particularly bright. They just have to mouth their parts.
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We need immigration, a LOT of it. In 10-20 years, hopefully a lot sooner, most people will understand that the world has become a competitive market for immigration.
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before that would happen, would we not need a world shortage of population?
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Population projections are very dire.
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And the Dumb Dodo Karma just keeps getting better.
Some of the 49 migrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard by the state of Florida are now able to legally work in the United States and have temporary protections from deportation — because they are considered victims of a potential crime.
The migrants are eligible for these protections because they applied for a special kind of visa meant for crime victims who are helping law enforcement, after they said they were tricked into taking charter flights from San Antonio to Massachusetts with false promises of jobs and other aid, said Rachel Self, an attorney for the migrants.
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2024/4/22/2236630/-DeSantis-s-Martha-s-Vineyard-Stunt-Allows-Undocumented-Immigrants-to-Legally-Stay-in-US
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You love to see it!
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love this
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Not for “Barry”, but for the rest of us who need to refute the Barries:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/04/23/immigration-jobs-economy/
Because we know that Wall Street and the Fed are full of left wing radical Marxist Leninist socialist commies.
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ROFL
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