02/24/2026
The Bracero Program was a large-scale guest worker agreement between the United States and Mexico created during World War II to address severe labor shortages in agriculture and railroad maintenance. Between 1942 and 1964, more than 4.5 million labor contracts were issued, making it the largest temporary foreign worker program in U.S. history. Although often described as a wartime measure, the program continued for more than two decades, becoming a permanent feature of the American agricultural economy.
Braceros were recruited primarily from rural regions of Mexico and transported to farms and railroads across the United States, particularly in California, Texas, Arizona, and the Midwest. In theory, the program promised fair wages, adequate housing, medical care, and protection from discrimination. In practice, many workers experienced harsh and degrading conditions. Upon arrival, braceros were frequently required to strip and were sprayed with pesticides such as DDT to eliminate lice. Housing was often overcrowded and unsanitary, food was insufficient, and workers faced unsafe labor conditions. Wage theft was widespread, including the withholding of a portion of earnings that was supposed to be deposited in savings accounts in Mexico funds many braceros never recovered.
Despite these abuses, braceros played a critical role in sustaining U.S. food production and infrastructure during and after the war. Their labor helped fuel the growth of industrial agriculture and contributed to the economic prosperity of mid-20th-century America. At the same time, the program reinforced patterns of racial segregation, labor exploitation, and political exclusion, shaping long-term attitudes toward migrant labor and immigration policy. The legacy of the Bracero Program continues to influence debates about guest worker programs, workers’ rights, and immigration in the United States today.
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