"one productivity-enhancing effect of high immigration is that you get greater human capital on the cheap by pinching it from other (mainly poor) countries."https://www.smh.com.au/business/immigration-the-cheap-and-nasty-way-to-grow-the-economy-20180318-h0xmf0.html?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=nc&eid=socialn%3Atwi-13omn1677-edtrl-other%3Annn-17%2F02%2F2014-edtrs_socialshare-all-nnn-nnn-vars-o%26sa%3DD%26usg%3DALhdy28zsr6qiq …
I simply think that's a separate topic from the one presented in the article: the interplay of host country economy and immigration. You're opening another can of worms and things are complicated enough :)
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It’s a closely related can of worms in the U.S., and it goes to the question if we are better off from brain draining the third world. There’s also the rare but deadly disappointed immigrant.http://humanevents.com/2017/07/05/immigrant-of-the-week-henry-bello-obotetukudo/ …
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