nnmartin
Well-Known Member
I am not talking about any specific country - more the idea in general.
Let's use an imaginary country - The Northern Lands. (TNL)
TNL has 1 million unemployed but even so the wages are getting too high for the comfort zone of the business owners.
Solution: Ship in 1.5 million unskilled immigrants from poorer countries around the world to keep the wages down. (they can only stay if they work)
Result : 2 million unemployed
2 million new-employees (immigrants + 0.5 million locals through job creation)
Analysis: The country has has a net gain of 2 million productive workers but at the expense of an extra 1 million local people unemployed. The wages are kept low, the business owners and banks are happy. The new arrivals are happy because at least they have food to eat which they didn't before. The 2 million unemployed are unhappy but at least they can survive on government welfare which they should be grateful for.
So who gains from this scenario?
Let's use an imaginary country - The Northern Lands. (TNL)
TNL has 1 million unemployed but even so the wages are getting too high for the comfort zone of the business owners.
Solution: Ship in 1.5 million unskilled immigrants from poorer countries around the world to keep the wages down. (they can only stay if they work)
Result : 2 million unemployed
2 million new-employees (immigrants + 0.5 million locals through job creation)
Analysis: The country has has a net gain of 2 million productive workers but at the expense of an extra 1 million local people unemployed. The wages are kept low, the business owners and banks are happy. The new arrivals are happy because at least they have food to eat which they didn't before. The 2 million unemployed are unhappy but at least they can survive on government welfare which they should be grateful for.
So who gains from this scenario?