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[return to "Americans Want to Believe Jobs Are the Solution to Poverty. They’re Not"]
1. tosser+aH[view] [source] 2018-09-12 02:27:34
>>tysone+(OP)
Wage growth would help, but for some reason, these articles never even mention immigration. The scale of immigration both legal and illegal I believe has the greatest impact on the lowest sectors of society. The lack of discussion on the impact so many potential new workers is having on wage growth leads one to think they believe labor cost is the one thing immune to the law of supply and demand.
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2. acchow+KO[view] [source] 2018-09-12 04:41:49
>>tosser+aH
You're ignoring the demand side. Immigrants also increase demand. For everything.
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3. dgut+UP[view] [source] 2018-09-12 04:59:30
>>acchow+KO
Do they? By how much? Immigrants have usually low wages. Anyways, in Western Europe, the increased demand (which is probably smaller than in the US), those things are easily canceled by the added costs to public healthcare + social benefits.
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4. Joeri+mR[view] [source] 2018-09-12 05:29:23
>>dgut+UP
In belgium the rising healthcare cost is almost entirely due to an aging population. To take care of those elderly you need nurses and care workers, 46000 extra per year for the coming decade. Meanwhile the schools only graduate 5000 per year, due to lack of interest by the native population because of the odd hours in nursing. The only way they’ve found to bridge the gap and take care of the elderly is bringing over people from the phillipines, because it turns out this problem exists across europe (aging population = care gap). Those immigrants are not taking anyone’s job away, they earn a decent wage and they’re doing a net positive contribution through work, taxes and commerce.

That’s an anecdote but there are plenty more like that. All of which is to say that the story the right pushes about immigrants being bad for the economy is just a story and doesn’t necessarily fit the facts.

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