Ana the Ist
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- Feb 21, 2012
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Most economists would have noted that the dip coincided with the Great Recession, which affected the United States like most of the world. C'mon...
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Great Recession - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Could be... it's a big chart with few years labeled.
You should at least try to be plausible. Notice it's not constant dollars. They graphed inflation.
Let's assume that's true...it would still be a graph charting an annual increase, up and to the right.
Actually, every science teaches students to make sure that correlation actually involves causation.
But only idiots believe that univariate analysis is meaningful to something like GDP lol.
Your graph shows inflation,not real GDP.
It still wouldn't change the trajectory of GDP....
It would still be up and to the right...a steady increase in GDP.
C'mon,
On Sunday, the Associated Press reported worker shortages have prompted some Alabama farmers who grow labor-intensive produce to plant less, rather than have crops rot in the fields again this year. Last fall Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley signed a tough law combating illegal immigration, which prompted undocumented workers to flee the state. Few locals will perform the grueling work of picking crops, and farmers stuck in a agricultural system built on illegal labor are struggling to find replacements before their produce rots.
Alabama’s situation is not unique. Georgia passed a similar immigration law in 2011. When undocumented workers fled, farmers lost around 40% of their workers and $140 million worth of blueberries, melons, onions, and other crops due to labor shortages. This year Georgia farmers again fear they will be short on workers to pick the crops, and many have scaled back production or stopped planting altogether.
It’s not only Southern states; farmers all across America are dependent on migrant labor. For example, immigrants make up 40% of Wisconsin’s dairy industry workers and almost one in three U.S. farming and fishing workers is from Mexico.
Alabama Illegal Immigrant Crackdown Destroys Farm Business
On Sunday, the Associated Press reported worker shortages have prompted some Alabama farmers who grow labor-intensive produce to plant less, rather than have crops rot in the fields again this year. Last fall Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley signed a…www.mic.com
GDP increased.
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