RADICALIZED REPUBLICANS: Mass Deportation Scheme To Hurt the US Economy More Than the Great Recession


Mass deportations could lead to a 7.4 percent drop in the GDP, meaning ‘the U.S. economy would not grow at all’ during President Trump’s second term, the report says

President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign promise of sweeping deportations could result in “severe economic fallout,” devastating the economy even more than the Great Recession, according to a report by Democrats in the Congressional Joint Economic Committee.

Although Trump’s messaging about improving the economy for Americans during his second term appeared to strike a chord with voters, another one of his campaign fixtures — mass deportations — could have harmful economic consequences, the December 11 report warns. The 78-year-old Republican has suggested that he would use the military to assist in mass deportations.


Not only would the move upend the lives of millions of migrants, but Trump’s plans for mass deportations could “reduce economic growth, shrink the labor force, cost U.S.-born workers their jobs, raise costs for nearly all Americans, and risk igniting inflation,” states the report, which relied on research by nonprofit organizations.

The American Immigration Council estimated that if the U.S. deported one million people each year until the country no longer had an undocumented population, it could lead to a 4.2 percent to 6.8 percent loss in GDP. “To put this in context, the economy shrank by 4.3 percent during the Great Recession,” the Democrats wrote.

The Great Recession ran from 2007 to 2009 and was spurred by the bursting housing bubble.


Some experts warn that Donald Trump’s economic plans could harm the country more than the Great Recession (Getty Images)
Estimates from the Peterson Institute for International Economics showed even grimmer economic consequences. After analyzing how the deportation of 8.3 million undocumented immigrants would impact the U.S. economy, the think tank found that the GDP would be 7.4 percent lower by 2028.

“This 7.4 percent reduction in GDP over four years would likely mean that the U.S. economy would not grow at all during President Trump’s second term,” the report says.

Employment would also be 7 percent lower by the end of Trump’s term, the institute found, and 44,000 U.S.-born workers would lose their jobs.


“Employers would not simply hire U.S.-born workers to fill the vacancies created by undocumented workers who are deported, as there would be too many vacancies, U.S.-born workers would be unlikely to move into these industries, and employer hiring behavior can be variable,” the report says.

Although undocumented immigrants only make up about 4.4 percent and 5.4 percent of the overall labor force, they have enormous roles in certain industries: construction, agriculture, health care and hospitality.


Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance have pledged a massive deportation plan once they take office in January (Getty Images)
Trump’s proposed mass deportations would remove up to 1.5 million workers from the construction industry, 225,000 from agriculture, one million from hospitality, 870,000 from manufacturing and 461,000 from transportation and warehousing, AIC estimated.


These labor shortages could also lead to increased costs across the board. Deporting 1.3 million immigrants would raise prices by 1.5 percent by 2028, while deporting 8.3 million immigrants would raise prices by 9.1 percent, the institute predicted.

By taking undocumented immigrants out of the equation, the U.S. is also losing a group of consumers, leading to reduced spending, the report says.

Given the estimated economic ramifications, Congressional Joint Economic Committee Chair Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) called Trump’s plan for mass deportations “reckless.”

“Trump’s plan to deport millions of immigrants does absolutely nothing to address the core problems driving our broken immigration system,” the New Mexico Democrat said. “Instead, all it will do is raise grocery prices, destroy jobs, and shrink the economy. His immigration policy is reckless and would cause irreparable harm to our economy.”
As the DOGE is proving, Trump won't be doing anything more than a few token deportations before declaring victory and moving onto something more profitable.

9f5zdl.jpg
 
trump won the election, by the skin of his teeth.

Harris has been on a ticket that won the majority of the popular vote, which is something trump has never had.
Harris has run for the presidency and never won the presidency, Walter.

She never will.

How do you like those apples, Walter?

You voted for a loser.

Poor Walter.
 
The majority of voters voted against trump. Less than a 1% shift in the popular vote, and Harris would be President.

trump supporters are a minority.
Agreed. The MAGA morons don't understand math. Regardless, Trump won and the DOGE will now be running the nation while the MAGA morons will be shoved aside.

That said, Trump won 49.7% of the vote meaning 50.3% of Americans voted against him.

 
Agreed. The MAGA morons don't understand math. Regardless, Trump won and the DOGE will now be running the nation while the MAGA morons will be shoved aside.

That said, Trump won 49.7% of the vote meaning 50.3% of Americans voted against him.

So, this means that 57% of the voters voted "against" Bill Clinton in his first term? And 50.8% voted against him in his second term?

I can see the ads now: Vote for Trump, still more popular than Bill Clinton.
 
Do you ever turn off FoKKKs? Even when you sleep?

He had a Fox microchip brain implant so he's always aware the very instant new Reichwing talking points are issued. Notice how he dutifully repeats them. Long ago, I copied some of his screeds, just a few phrases, into Google to see what came up. Mostly because they were so far from reality that I wondered how he was coming up with this shit. And lo! the exact same phrases were being repeated on one alt-RW site after another. pEarl, Toxic, Stone, etc. are incapable of original thought or critical thinking. Therefore, they assume that we Lefties are, as well. If it's outrageous, hateful, bigoted, racist, and/or just plain insane, to them it is real.
 

Mass deportations could lead to a 7.4 percent drop in the GDP, meaning ‘the U.S. economy would not grow at all’ during President Trump’s second term, the report says

President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign promise of sweeping deportations could result in “severe economic fallout,” devastating the economy even more than the Great Recession, according to a report by Democrats in the Congressional Joint Economic Committee.

Although Trump’s messaging about improving the economy for Americans during his second term appeared to strike a chord with voters, another one of his campaign fixtures — mass deportations — could have harmful economic consequences, the December 11 report warns. The 78-year-old Republican has suggested that he would use the military to assist in mass deportations.


Not only would the move upend the lives of millions of migrants, but Trump’s plans for mass deportations could “reduce economic growth, shrink the labor force, cost U.S.-born workers their jobs, raise costs for nearly all Americans, and risk igniting inflation,” states the report, which relied on research by nonprofit organizations.

The American Immigration Council estimated that if the U.S. deported one million people each year until the country no longer had an undocumented population, it could lead to a 4.2 percent to 6.8 percent loss in GDP. “To put this in context, the economy shrank by 4.3 percent during the Great Recession,” the Democrats wrote.

The Great Recession ran from 2007 to 2009 and was spurred by the bursting housing bubble.


Some experts warn that Donald Trump’s economic plans could harm the country more than the Great Recession (Getty Images)
Estimates from the Peterson Institute for International Economics showed even grimmer economic consequences. After analyzing how the deportation of 8.3 million undocumented immigrants would impact the U.S. economy, the think tank found that the GDP would be 7.4 percent lower by 2028.

“This 7.4 percent reduction in GDP over four years would likely mean that the U.S. economy would not grow at all during President Trump’s second term,” the report says.

Employment would also be 7 percent lower by the end of Trump’s term, the institute found, and 44,000 U.S.-born workers would lose their jobs.


“Employers would not simply hire U.S.-born workers to fill the vacancies created by undocumented workers who are deported, as there would be too many vacancies, U.S.-born workers would be unlikely to move into these industries, and employer hiring behavior can be variable,” the report says.

Although undocumented immigrants only make up about 4.4 percent and 5.4 percent of the overall labor force, they have enormous roles in certain industries: construction, agriculture, health care and hospitality.


Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance have pledged a massive deportation plan once they take office in January (Getty Images)
Trump’s proposed mass deportations would remove up to 1.5 million workers from the construction industry, 225,000 from agriculture, one million from hospitality, 870,000 from manufacturing and 461,000 from transportation and warehousing, AIC estimated.


These labor shortages could also lead to increased costs across the board. Deporting 1.3 million immigrants would raise prices by 1.5 percent by 2028, while deporting 8.3 million immigrants would raise prices by 9.1 percent, the institute predicted.

By taking undocumented immigrants out of the equation, the U.S. is also losing a group of consumers, leading to reduced spending, the report says.

Given the estimated economic ramifications, Congressional Joint Economic Committee Chair Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) called Trump’s plan for mass deportations “reckless.”

“Trump’s plan to deport millions of immigrants does absolutely nothing to address the core problems driving our broken immigration system,” the New Mexico Democrat said. “Instead, all it will do is raise grocery prices, destroy jobs, and shrink the economy. His immigration policy is reckless and would cause irreparable harm to our economy.”
economic growth is a stupid metric in a fiat currency system.
 
Indeed. I voted against Bill both times.
Same here. Except for Perot in '92, I always voted Republican until I realized the Republican Party had left me and I became a Libertarian.

I keep hoping the Republican Party will return to sanity, but given its present trajectory, I don't see that happening for another 4 to 8 years at a minimum.
 
So, this means that 57% of the voters voted "against" Bill Clinton in his first term? And 50.8% voted against him in his second term?

I can see the ads now: Vote for Trump, still more popular than Bill Clinton.
lol, they’re both about the same in Dutch’s world.
Indeed. I voted against Bill both times.
Correct. I was one of them. Were you?

LOL
I think Bill
^^^
Another Trump voter having regrets about voting for him. I❤️Irony
Did he vote, he doesn’t seem the type.
 
The numbers are the numbers. It's a matter of record. :)

Not sure if Fredo can vote, but he's been a Trump supporter for years.
I was anti globalist before trump came around.

I had basically stopped arguing with all the brainless neocons here.

then trump the Elon cocksuck gave me hope.

But I don't need hope when I have jesus and Buddha.
 
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