- NEW!
Help answer this question below.
What type of ecosystem does the vampire bat live in?
by Answerbag Staff on May 21st, 2011
| 1 person likes this
Can a governor call the National Guard to defend the borders?
by Answerbag Staff on July 22nd, 2010
| 1 person likes this
I overstayed in Costa Rica for 4 months and returned back to US for 12 days, Now I am again going back there.
by rajesheva on December 31st, 2011
| 1 person likes this
What Does It Mean When the County Jail Has an Inmate on Immigration Hold?
by Answerbag Staff on August 12th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
My husband summited forms to bring his fiance from Ukraine wile we are still divorcing. How can i report to the immigration?
by Patira on March 19th, 2012
| 1 person likes this
You're reading How are illegal immigrants helpful to the United States?
Comments
For those of you who don't believe this answer, check out this LA Times article about Colorado's agricultural labor shortage...http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-inmates1mar01,1,1597348.story
by Old School on March 8th, 2007
I was just thinking of that example, OldSchool - thanks for posting the link.
by Jessicax23 on March 8th, 2007
did you read the article?
by Jessicax23 on March 9th, 2007
Thanks nevets! (&^%$#@ Answerbag commenting keeps eating my links)
by Old School on March 9th, 2007
Nevets - I think one of the side effects of having some jobs almost exclusively done by illegal immigrants for the past 2-3 decades is that those jobs are now socially stigmatized to the point that non-immigrants won't consider doing them for ANY price. Last summer the LA times had an article about a landscape contractor offering $24/hour to do roadside landscaping who couldn't find any applicants. I think it's less an economics issue and more a social class snobbery issue.
by Old School on March 9th, 2007
If the pay rate was increased, I bet Americans would do the job. For instance, the pay for sewer cleaners (like Roto-Rooter) is high enough that people will do that kind of stinky work. The problem is that Americans won't want to pay the increased costs for food products, etc, which will result from those employers having to pay a reasonable wage. I can easily picture an American who picks fruit and vegatables in the summer and works at a ski lodge in the winter (or maybe just goes on unemployment).
by weatherman taking week or so off on April 19th, 2007
Now that min wage has been increased, the result is that teenagers and many other are finding it near impossible to find (summer/pt) jobs and employers are either doing without or hiring illegals for less than min to stay in business --- or going out of business.
by Scifisuz on October 5th, 2009
@Scifisuz - I would be *very* hesitant to attribute any recent economic news to the minimum wage increase. It might be having some effect, but I doubt that it can be detected given the much greater influence of the economic meltdown.
by Old School on October 5th, 2009