The state was able to use this system well to fill gaps in the labor market by applying underserved branches of work in privatized prisons with little pay and virtually no benefits. Although the state still claims to have suffered losses with the prisoners, it manages to make a whole monetary machine work inside the prison branch, for jobs, technologies, contracting and production of particular branches lacking in the market. The penal system contributes directly to the regulation of the lower segments of the labor market, forcing people into the labor market with a strategy against resistance to work through fear and the imposition of job offers. These positions imposed as stated above, have a slight remuneration with insignificant benefits to the worker. This imposition is clearer for welfare recipients in whom the penal system acts in agreement with the workfare, to force the entry of the clientele in the peripheral segments of the …show more content…
These people, who live in the American ghettos, are socially excluded and for this reason they end up falling into illicit branches like smuggling and other forms of crimes for being in a fragile situation and lacking options capable of giving them a dignified life. Incarceration is a reflection of the logic of ethnoracial exclusion from which the ghetto has been since its historical