Immigration In The US

586 Words3 Pages
Immigration in the US In this day and time, life is a pure struggle for most Americans. So many people have immigrated to the United States because of job opportunities and to better their families lives, leaving the natives jobless, paying more taxes, and doing whatever is possible to stay afloat in today’s economy. “Over the past 20 years, two apparently contradictory changes have been taking place in the U.S. labor market: the quantity and quality of jobs available to low-skill workers have steadily declined, and the number of low-skill immigrants entering the country in search of employment has steadily increased” (Waldinger and Lichter). Immigration is one of the leading problems in the US today and something needs to be done about…show more content…
“Erik Larson of the San Diego Farm Bureau says that, because land is so expensive, farmers have to grow crops with a high return on investment, and those crops are also labor intensive. He says that without immigrant labor most farms in San Diego would disappear”. “Construction and tourism also benefit from cheap immigrant labor. Tourism is central to San Diego’s economy, and many of the people changing the sheets and washing the dishes in hotels and restaurants are illegal immigrants. Their low wages increase employers’ profits and lower consumers’ costs.” (St. John). Illegal immigrants do work a lot of the jobs the rest of this country does not care to do, and in that way yes it is beneficial. But those jobs only call for so many people, what is to be done with all the rest that come here? This is where the eliminating caps per-country for green cards could really come in…show more content…
Immigrants are taking the United States citizen’s jobs, legal citizens are having to pay taxes for these illegal immigrants who are not paying taxes in return and, they are over populating per capita. If immigrants want to come to the United States they should have to do it legally regardless of how long it takes, and they should be put where workers are needed and where there is room for them. The government should be on top of this with programs, procedures, and precautions. Works Cited Bettina. “Report: Eliminate Per-County Green Card Caps.” Immigration Direct. Web. 31. Oct. 2011. St. John, Alison. “Costs and Benefits of Illegal Immigration Are Unequally Distributed.” KPSD. KPSD, 23 July 2010. Web. 31. Oct. 2011. Waldinger, Roger, and Michael Litcher. 2003. How The Other Half Works: Immigration And The Social Organization of Labor. University of California
Open Document