The first truth I will be talking about is that immigrants are generally responding to a strong and persistent demand that is built into the structure of post-industrial economies. What is meant by this is that there is a secondary market that immigrants are attracted to that the natives would not like doing, nor would last. These jobs are usually the jobs that are long hours and heavy labor, that pay much less. The immigrants come for these jobs to start a life here in the United States, but without those jobs, the immigrants would not migrate due to the risks involved. Some of these jobs include cleaning services, butchers, landscapers, construction workers, and many other higher labor jobs. What the article means when it says natives “shun” these jobs is that natives would have a hard time with the conditions of the job, and see the jobs as a job for immigrants.
Moreover, this truth seems to have common themes with the Dual Labor Market Theory, because in this theory there are primary and secondary markets. The secondary markets in this theory are the higher labor
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In their hometowns, there can be violence and minimal opportunities for them to find work and support a family. They take the jobs that the natives do not want to do and they do them with pride. This is because it is a dream for most of them to come to the U.S.A and once it happens they will work anywhere they have to become more successful. The policy makers should make it a little less complicated for this to happen. Almost 24 years was the wait time for family members of US citizens from the Philippines (Bergeron, 2013). I’m not saying make everyone a legal citizen right away but make this dream of theirs a little more of a reality. The public should praise them for doing the jobs they will not do because without the immigrants a lot of these places would not be up and