Nearly half of the Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or their children, underscoring the outsized role of immigrant entrepreneurship in shaping America’s economic landscape [1]. Recent data highlights a surge in Latino-owned businesses, which grew by 44% between 2018 and 2023, generating over $650 billion annually in revenue. Latino entrepreneurs have established new ventures at twice the rate of the general population, driving growth in sectors like construction and manufacturing. This trend reflects a broader pattern: immigrant and immigrant-descendant founders have long been pivotal to U.S. innovation and industrial expansion.
The economic momentum of Latino-led enterprises, however, faces headwinds from policies that undermine small business ecosystems. Anti-immigrant measures, including heightened enforcement actions and proposed cuts to federal programs, have disrupted consumer spending and business operations. Immigrants, even those with legal status, are increasingly hesitant to engage in local economies, prioritizing savings for legal costs and family security over discretionary spending. Concurrently, tariffs and reductions in small business funding have weakened the support structures critical to scaling immigrant-owned ventures. These challenges threaten to erode the very foundations of the nation’s economic vitality.
Immigrant entrepreneurship is not merely a demographic trend but a structural driver of national prosperity. Small businesses owned by Latino and immigrant communities create jobs, contribute to public coffers through taxes, and foster localized wealth. For instance, the projected $1.1 trillion in untapped economic value from Latino-owned businesses—if they achieved revenue parity with white-owned counterparts—demonstrates the sector’s transformative potential. Yet, systemic barriers persist, including disparities in access to capital and discriminatory lending practices. Latino entrepreneurs are approximately half as likely to receive full funding compared to their white peers, a gap exacerbated by limited representation of Latino-led community development financial institutions (CDFIs).
Addressing these disparities requires targeted policy interventions. Restoring federal support for small business programs, including business coaching and technical assistance, could help entrepreneurs navigate regulatory complexities and market challenges. Similarly, expanding funding for CDFIs, which specialize in serving underrepresented communities, would bridge gaps in access to credit. Additionally, enforcing safeguards against discriminatory lending practices—such as the stalled rule requiring demographic data collection in small business lending—is essential to ensuring equitable access to capital.
The resilience of immigrant entrepreneurship is a testament to the American economy’s adaptability and dynamism. However, policies that marginalize these communities risk stifling innovation and growth. By prioritizing inclusive economic strategies, policymakers can harness the talents of Latino and immigrant entrepreneurs to build a more resilient and equitable future. The data is unequivocal: an economy that embraces diversity in its entrepreneurial ranks is stronger, more innovative, and better positioned to meet global challenges.
[1] Source: Fortune
Title: Nearly half of Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or their children. It shows how Latino entrepreneurs can drive America’s economic future
URL: https://fortune.com/2025/07/30/latinos-immigration-economy-julian-castro-carolina-martinez-cameo/