• grte@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    Concerns over immigration are mostly about the economy

    https://theconversation.com/nobel-winner-david-card-shows-immigrants-dont-reduce-the-wages-of-native-born-workers-169768

    https://davidcard.berkeley.edu/papers/new-immig.pdf

    It is incorrect to think of economic activity as a limited resource that must be defended against the rapacious outsider. Economic activity is not only consumed by people, but also created by them. Value is a product of human labour. In fact, Canada should be looking to increase it’s population rapidly so that the market that exists here can develop enough of a gravity of its own that we aren’t so reliant on the US market.

    Outsourcing and automation have been far, far more impactful with regards to wages. NAFTA as well has hollowed out a lot of our economy so that the only real growth sectors are resource extraction which feeds the US market, and real estate. Protectionism is a bit of a dirty word however I think it’s necessary to develop industries where we can create value-added products out of our own natural resources, and ultimately build a much more varied and healthy economy. And we need far more people than we are birthing locally to do that.

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      8 months ago

      This is true under conditions of no significant resource constraints. We’ve hit a resource constraint in the most in-demand locations- housing - due to all the known causes like zoning, etc. Regardless of the causes, it’s a constraint that increases the costs across the economy but it is felt the most by the lower parts of the wage scale. It may be wise to balance that while solving the resource constraint in order to avoid destabilization. People will vote against the precarity of their housing situation whether it negatively affects other priorities or not and for a good reason.