You keep saying that as the supply of labor increases the wage rate falls, which just isn't true.
Quote:
Despite the popular belief that immigrants have a large adverse impact on the wages and employment opportunities of the native-born population, the literature on this question does not provide much support for the conclusion.
Source
Quote:
More research has been done since that survey was written, but the general conclusions remain much the same. Economists find no evidence for widespread wage decreases. The debate on the effect of immigration on wage rates of native-born workers has, believe it or not, narrowed down to the effect on wages of high-school drop-outs. Estimates range from slightly positive to, at worst, an eight-percent fall.
source
Key Points -
- To what extent does the increased demand for goods and services (and hence, for the labor to produce them) created by more immigrants offset the greater supply of labor? Don’t the laws of supply and demand dictate that wages would fall? Not when other things change at the same time. Those immigrants who increase the supply of labor also demand goods and services, causing the demand for labor to increase.
- To what extent does immigrant labor compete directly with native labor? The downward effect on native wages would be maximal if immigrants and natives had identical skill sets. immigrants don’t simply shift the supply of labor. Labor is heterogeneous. When the immigrants have different skills than the native-born population, they complement the native-born labor rather than substitute for them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
-:Undertaker:-
If it works out better for the Briton to remain on benefits because they are worse off by taking a job with lower wages then it's the fault of mass migration due to the fact that if that's the case (that the job isn't paying enough) the market would have - without mass migration - have been forced to pay more for the job at hand. Because of mass migration they no longer need to do that and instead can count on a labor force arriving from second-world countries in Eastern Europe.
If people choose to remain on benefits rather than work, that's a problem with the benefits system, not immigration.
Quote:
Of course it's also the fault of the benefits system too but there's no denying that mass migration has depressed low skilled wages.
Nope
Quote:
As i've said countless times - let's have a work permit/visa system whereby permits are issued depending on criminal records, numbers of people coming in, local services where the job is located and whether or not we actually need a foreigner to do the job instead of a Briton. Pretty much like every other country.
We do, just not for those in the EU
Quote:
Ofc for this to happen we'd have to leave the EU.
Which is a separate debate entirely.