bar mexican: Immigrants living illegally in the United States account for roughly 18 per cent of employment in agriculture, 13 per cent in construction and 10 per cent at restaurants, hotels and casinos, according to a study done last year by the National Bureau of Economic Research, according to Metro News. The economic shock would cause widespread ramifications, says Ben Gitis, director of labour market policy at the American Action Forum, a conservative think-tank . Addressing Congress on Tuesday night, Trump vowed to build a great, great wall to bar Mexican from entering the United States illegally. That's the view of many economists, who say the United States can't afford to suddenly lose vast numbers of the immigrants who work illegally picking fruit and vegetables, building houses, busing tables, staffing meat-packing plants and cleaning hotel rooms. Even as he spoke, the president said, U.S. authorities were deporting the bad ones. Yet what exactly Trump wants to do about illegal immigration remains hazy because he has said different things at different times. The president's tough talk followed remarks he had made to CBS's 60 Minutes after his November election He warned that his administration might deport 2 million to 3 million of those living in the country illegally.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
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