Population transfer from bad to good countries within the EU. Equalizing demographics is the only way to equalize countries but then you no longer have good countries, just a lot of mediocre ones. https://twitter.com/idvck/status/1001494811516506113 …
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there virtually does not exist a single report that concludes that EU immigration has been a net negative for denmark, no idea where you're getting this from.
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I said their children. The first generation is net positive because they grew up at home (i.e. no costs for Denmark in early life). I.e. in the reports, look for "Efterkommere, vestlige" which is mostly EU later gen. E.g. https://www.fm.dk/oekonomi-og-tal/oekonomisk-analyse/2017/indvandreres-nettobidrag-til-offentlige-finanser …pic.twitter.com/0srfIcstAd
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EU, øst (east) is obviously below Danish mean. But in any case, one does not need these actual numbers to make the predictions because we know that immigrant outcomes are easy to predict from home country well-doing.pic.twitter.com/IAWUKSeQpW
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the report you linked yourself states that 1) eu immigrants are a massive plus for society. 2) when you corrigate for the young age of the descendants of EU immigrants they become a positive contributing factor as well. being 1:1 with natives after one gen is a weird expectationpic.twitter.com/xwoDmKrfEA
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(1): first generation, not later generations. (2). No, Table 3.1 is for all western later generations, not EU specifically. For EU specifically, look at Figure 3.11. It shows EU and East EU later generations are net negative relative to whole population.
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the text to 3.11 literally states that while not as beneficial to tax income as native and western eu citizens, eastern eu is still net positive.pic.twitter.com/jSzvGchKtg
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No, they are talking about the line being above 0 in the working age population (erhvervsaktive alder). The life-time contribution of this group is obviously below that of the general population, and thus even more below that of Danes.
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You're concluding that solely based off the graph, which is based on a extrapolation, from what I can tell, given that second gen Eastern European immigrants are barely in their teens, at best, as if this year. Not to even mention pensionists.
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