b. The jobs that people are getting are pretty crummy (which is why low-paying undocumented immigrants were doing them).
c. You have less business at these jobs (because some fraction of your customer base just got told to GTFO).
d. All the unemployed immigrants now went somewhere else, so they’re someone else’s problem in a neighboring state. Or they’re hanging around committing crimes in desperation. Or they’re making even less money working under even worse conditions for someone who is willing to flout the law if it’s profitable enough.
This also coincides with the BRAC movement of the army materiel command to Huntsville. A great many of my Federal Contractor friends are opening offices down there - and having trouble getting their employees to move. The riff’ed NASA folks are an excellent match for these openings. . .
One would think that if the unemployment rate is so closely tied to illegal immigration, movement of the former should closely follow movement of the latter for the country as a whole. Shouldn’t be too hard to demonstrate such a trend, and yet FAIR hasn’t tried as far as I can tell (or at least hasn’t published the results of such a study).
Here’s a story: Alabama’s economy has lost out on $10.8 billion due to the immigration law, including almost $350 million in tax revenues at the state and local level.
So, if I’m reading that right, Alabama’s economy has lost out on $10.8B because of illegals losing their jobs? So what’s preventing those jobs from being filled by legal immigrants/citizens of the U.S.?
(And how do you calculate income tax paid by illegal immigrants? )
You don’t think illegals are tax evaders, do you? They aren’t Americans.
ETA: and as far as replacing the work done by illegal immigrants, Stephen Colbert had some insights on how it may be difficult to find Americans to do all those jobs:
According to complaints by farmers I heard on an NPR story a while ago, the legal residents found farm work to be too hard, most quitting after a day or less. They also work more slowly, costing the farmers money in lost produce.
Thing about “stoop labor” is not the labor, its the stoop. The actual labor isn’t so hard, its the physical position you must maintain to perform the labor. As an interrogation technique, it would be illegal under international law.
One need not be physically strong, women and children can do the work pretty near as well as a full grown man. An ability to endure suffering is just about the only requirement, outside of absorbing some simple instructions.
Of course, motivation is crucial to the stoop labor employee. And if there is one thing the undocumented worker has in abundance, it is motivation. About the only thing he has in abundance. And pain, of course, but that’s harder to sell, everybody has some and nobody wants more.
Wait, what ? Picking tomatoes is a specialized skill now ? It’s lifting stuff off a waist-high vine, it doesn’t really *get *any more unskilled than this !
Being willing to do so for extremely low pay with minimal rest while being exposed to dangerous levels of pesticide is a specialized “skill”. Or in other words:
I’d add “or treat them like human beings” to that.
You are assuming that the people leaving are doing so because they are all illegal aliens. They aren’t. These laws are an excuse to persecute people for being poor and brown, not because they are illegal anything. Plenty of legal citizens flee laws like this, and the persecution that goes along with them.
It wouldn’t. There is no economic benefit to hiring undocumented workers if you pay them the same as everyone else. I suppose there is some number of undocumented workers who are proficient enough in English to be hired over locals, and have borrowed Social Security numbers, but I can’t imagine there are many.
Some years ago there was a class action suit filed claiming that Wal-Mart was hiring illegal immigrants at below minimum wage to work custodial jobs. Back then, right-wingers weren’t pissed about them being hired, just that they were demanding equal pay.