Donald Trump has started to put smiles on the faces of the people of America after saving around 1900 jobs for the people of Indiana. The President-elect recently had tweeted he is negotiating with defence contractor United Technologies not to ship their plants to Mexico.
On Tuesday, Trump once again tweeted that the negotiations with Carrier is now successful, and they won't be moving to Mexico any longer.
Carrier is owned by defence contractor United Technologies and in February had announced it will close down two Indiana plants, a Carrier plant in Indianapolis employed 1400 people and another a United Technologies Electronic Controls plant in nearby Huntington, Indiana, that employs 700.
Though Carrier did not elaborate on the deal it struck with Donald Trump, the company via his twitter account had said it will no longer be moving to Mexico, after some talk with President-elect, Donald Trump.
The company had planned to move before the meeting with Donald Trump, as they believe moving away from the US will save them $65 million a year in labour costs.
The president elect, and vice president elect and also Indiana governor, Mike Pence, will be in Indiana on Thursday to announce the deal.
A university of Michigan professor of Economics, Justin Wolfers, said that the new deal for Carrier could set a bad precedent for other company by threatening to leave the US for Mexico.
Justin tweeted;