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by learc83
2851 days ago
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We don't know what the impact of low skilled immigrants is on aggregate demand or on wage growth in the short term. Studies done on low-skill immigration are inconclusive. Google, the Mariel boatlift studies for example. Some studies show a decrease in wages, some show an increase, and some show no impact. Generally this indicates that the effect is too small to overcome statistical noise. In the long term however, we have good evidence to support that immigration of all kinds is a net benefit to the economy. > I feel that as a nation we owe it to our poorest to look out for their interests as long as wages remain stagnant for their income strata. And if immigration is likely beneficial long term, and the short term impact is unknown or at least too small to easily measure, then decreasing immigration isn't necessarily looking out for their interests (or the interests of their children). Automation will likely play a much bigger role in wage growth over the next decades, but no popular politicians are calling for an ban on self-checkout lines. |
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What’s the evidence that it is beneficial in the long term?
We have had decades of flat wage growth and large l increases in cost of living.
In the short term it’s clearly negative when you take into account not just wages but increased pressure on housing and infrastructure.