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by grapeskin
1460 days ago
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Wages for jobs with an influx of cheap immigrant labor don't rise (they drop) and rents have been rising exponentially and inflation is accelerating. My figures were likely a bit too optimistic so I do apologize for that. Places I rented for $600/month 6 years ago are now reaching $2000/month now, so assuming the trends hold for 20 years and factoring in the drop in the value of the dollar, rents may very well more than quadruple. Immigration has been trending downwards for a very long time in the US[1]. There are far more desirable countries these days (such as Canada), and even then, those will likely lose their appeal as well. [1] https://www.brookings.edu/blog/the-avenue/2020/12/15/just-be... |
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If demand for nursing goes through the roof, wages for nurses will rise.
> factoring in the drop in the value of the dollar
If you're factoring change in the value of currency for rents, you should be considering it for in-demand jobs.
> rents may very well more than quadruple.
You're positing a scenario where the population wanting to rent falls, rents quadruple, and wages decrease markedly in real value. This seems to be self-inconsistent.
> Immigration has been trending downwards for a very long time in the US[1].
Then you cite an article mostly about internal migration. The real numbers don't look like that so much: https://www.migrationpolicy.org/programs/data-hub/charts/imm...
Immigrants are a larger share of the US population than any time since 1920, and much, much larger in absolute numbers. Net migration is a bit lower in these past 4-5 years than in years previous-- mostly because of restrictive Trump-era policies and decreased illegal migration from Mexico. And they fell off a cliff for the past couple of years because of, well, COVID.
But the actual queues for immigrant visas are also longer than before.