opinions

How immigrant workers helped stave off a US recession

Font size+Author:Worldly Weaves news portalSource:politics2024-04-30 04:41:11I want to comment(0)

MIAMI (AP) — Having fled economic and political chaos in Venezuela, Luisana Silva now loads carpets

MIAMI (AP) — Having fled economic and political chaos in Venezuela, Luisana Silva now loads carpets for a South Carolina rug company. She earns enough to pay rent, buy groceries, gas up her car — and send money home to her parents.

Reaching the United States was a harrowing ordeal. Silva, 25, her husband and their then-7-year-old daughter braved the treacherous jungles of Panama’s Darien Gap, traveled the length of Mexico, crossed the Rio Grande and then turned themselves in to the U.S. Border Patrol in Brownsville, Texas. Seeking asylum, they received a work permit last year and found jobs in Rock Hill, South Carolina.

“My plan is to help my family that much need the money and to grow economically here,” Silva said.

Her story amounts to far more than one family’s arduous quest for a better life. The millions of jobs that Silva and other new immigrant arrivals have been filling in the United States appear to solve a riddle that has confounded economists for at least a year:

Related articles
  • Warning signs of a mini

    Warning signs of a mini

    2024-04-30 04:35

  • 4th China International Consumer Products Expo opens to public

    4th China International Consumer Products Expo opens to public

    2024-04-30 03:45

  • Sami Sheen is nearly unrecognizable at Coachella as she swaps her racy OnlyFans look for a covered

    Sami Sheen is nearly unrecognizable at Coachella as she swaps her racy OnlyFans look for a covered

    2024-04-30 03:31

  • Takeaways from this week's reports on the deadly 2023 Maui fire that destroyed Lahaina

    Takeaways from this week's reports on the deadly 2023 Maui fire that destroyed Lahaina

    2024-04-30 03:17

Netizen comments