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| | #161 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | I think the problem with immigration is that many discussing it think this is something that can be effectively controlled with better borders. Immigration is a global phenomena involving millions of people in a wide range of settings and circumstances. Globalization means communications are easier now and this has meant the range of immigration has increased, more people are migrating farther. US fears of terrorism, though recent, have also had a big impact. Now immigrants face more dangers at higher expense in greater illegality thanks to a 'hardening' of attitudes resulting from (or justified as) concern over terrorism. The US-Mexico problem has its unique particularities which focus on 3 inescapable features; proximity, tradition and economic disparity. Something similar happens in France with North Africans. Wherever you have a prosperous community next door to a poor region there will be this flow from the poor to the other. To adress the problem sensibly requires we first recognize how irrelevant terrorist concerns actually are in this issue. Terrorists don't infiltrate roving bands of immigrants to follow their routes and sneak across borders. Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff Last edited by rmnunez; Mar 16, 2006 at 02:37 pm. |
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| | #162 (permalink) (top) | |
| Iceberg Location: Connecticut Posts: 5,703 | Quote:
This discussion has absolutely nothing to do with immigration to any other country except between the US and Mexico. I have no problem whatsoever with immigration into the US, but I will write this until I become blue in the face: There must be legal ports of entry only. No matter what the consequences, the tide of undocumented workers must be stopped and rechanneled through legal ports of entry. Both Mexico and the United States are nations of laws and those laws must be enforced and respected by both nations otherwise justice breaks downs, social order breaks down, and law abiding citizens will lose all respect for the rule of law. The ramifications of continued illegal entry into the US from Mexico are far reaching and continue to undermine the labor laws of the United States. Controlling the legal flow of immigrants will solve many problems, least of which is the artificial wage scale that is created by the undocumented workers. When the excess undocumented labor is curtailed, wages will rise that will accurately reflect the labor supply that is available to the employers in the US. This will benefit ALL workers, not just the undocumented ones that are the cause of the de facto artifical wage controls that are in place now. Immigration control is absolutely necessary to begin to correct a host of problems caused by the flow of undocumented workers here in the US. The sooner this situation is under control, the quicker everyone will benefit, most of all, the workers themselves. The natural increase in wages through the economic relationship between the supply and demand of the available labor, and its positive effects upon the wages of that labor pool avaiable in the US, will have to rise to meet the demand by labor from employers in the US. This is a simple case of supply and demand which is being unaturallly affected by a undocumented labor pool. When the flow of undocumented workers is controlled by the border authorities, it will curtail the vast availibility of undocumented labor, and wages will have to rise due to a shortage of labor. It is a win win situation for all workers in the US. Brien the Iceberg If you tell the truth you don't have to remember anything. M.T. | |
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| | #163 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | brien, I think this is really just a hope of yours: Quote:
What you ignore is the size of the problem. If twice as many undocumented workers as the allocated slots, take the risk and cross the border to visit their families in Mexico for Christmas, you should get an idea of the magnitude of labor demands in the US. As I've noted (more than once) the growth of the US economy is generating lots of low end service-sector jobs. Making those jobs highly-paid doesn't solve the problem of who will fill the positions as it is forecasted the aging population and low birth rate in the US will result in more vacancies than there are able-bodied united statians capable of filling. And then there is the foreseable consequence of doubling the salary to janitors, store clerks, short-order cooks, supermarket bag-boys and car parking attendants everywhere -gross inflation more harshly felt at the low end. Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff Last edited by rmnunez; Mar 16, 2006 at 05:32 pm. | |
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| | #164 (permalink) (top) | |
| Iceberg Location: Connecticut Posts: 5,703 | Quote:
The size of the problem is only related to the labor force. If there are jobs that go unfiulled in the Southwest because of low wages, then until the wages rise, those jobs will remain unfilled. If Company A pays $7 per hr, and Company B pays $10 per hr, the $10 per hr jobs will be filled first. If Comapny A doesn't raise their wage level, they will either go out of business or have to make up the wage gap through another means, perhaps through benefits. The point is that no matter how large the problem, it will be solved by the law of supply and demand. If certain parts of the country exhaust their labor pool, then people from other parts of the country will migrate toward those jobs. When the labor pools swells, then the wages will decrease. When the USA reaches full employment, then the government will have to catch up to the situation by increasing the levels of immigration from Mexico, and other countries. It is a situation that requiure attention now. On this we all agree. The type of jobs makes no difference when there is a labor shortage. They can be MC Donalds jobs or they can be landscaping jobs. It makes no difference because wages for unskilled labor are relative to the labor supply in the market it exists. A Mc Donald's worker in Connecticut earns a higher wage than one in Mississippi. If there are more unskilled jobs available in New York, and those jobs pay less than in Connecticut, NY will eventually have to raise the hourly wage of its unskilled jobs in order to attract the labor to fill those jobs. When that happens, it will then attract the labor from neighboring states to fill the job openings, thereby drawing down the labor pool. No matter how you rationalize it, the law of supply and demand will work to the benefit of all workers, both natives and immigrants. As for inflation, wage and prices always find their workable levels better without government intevention. This was proved in the Nixon Administration when price controls failed miserably. When wages rise, prices will rise, but the level of equity will find and correct itself in the market. Brien the Iceberg If you tell the truth you don't have to remember anything. M.T. | |
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| | #165 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | The forecasted labor shortages and low birth-rates in the US are nationwide, not something that can be compensated for with domestic immigration. It is anticipated 77 million united statians, not just Southwesterners, will retire in the next 4 years, where is the US going to get people to fill their vacancies? I supose robotics might help, but can that many of these sort of jobs be filled with machines? Inflation is amenable to government controls, it has been successfully throttled since Nixon through governmental banking controls regulating the money supply. A 5% unemployment rate, is negligible, a good symptom in any economy. Full employment in all sectors a theoretical notion not seen even under communism with its mandatory employment. Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff |
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| | #166 (permalink) (top) | ||
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,809 | Quote:
Quote:
"Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen | ||
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| | #167 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | The 8% unemployment rate is derived (though not by me) from the "oncenoticias" item posted which found 92% of the undocumented in the US were employed, they also mention the 77 million united statian manpower shortage by 2010. "Oncenoticias" is a news broadcaster in Mexico City owned and operated by "Televisa", its Mexican, but other than that unbiased. The US Census Bureau (also linked reiteratedly by me -though in another thread here) provides data on the 1.8 birth rate (I think replacement level is supposed to be 2.2. and that they clocked Hispanics at 2.8). Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff |
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| | #168 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | Quote:
Here I posted 2 US census Bureau links that relate to the growing proportion of Hispanics or Mexicans in the US demographic: Mexico on the scene: I think you can find the data on birth rates through the non-.pdf Census link Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff Last edited by rmnunez; Mar 17, 2006 at 12:49 am. | |
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| | #169 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,809 | Quote:
If U.S. birth rates are below replacement levels, we only have to ramp up legal immigration to ameliorate that situation. There are simply no advantages to illegal immigration to anyone except those that exploit people desperate enough to take the risks to get here. "Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen | |
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| | #170 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | Yes Zee, the US needs to "ramp up" (or raise) legal immigration, allowing 140 thousand H-1Bs just means the the rest of the immigrant workers are illegal, so adjust the settings and there will be fewer illegals. Illegal immigration is just a function of how difficult it is to comply with the law. Incidentally, the H-1B slots for 2007 become available this year on March 28th and are expected to be exhausted within 2 weeks or 10 days (2008's slots become available in October). Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff |
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| | #171 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,809 | Quote:
Your practice of deceit and obfuscation of the facts is really wearing thin. "Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen | |
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| | #172 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,809 | Quote:
"Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen | |
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| | #173 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | Zee, you'll need to go into the Census source (see the links at the bottom of the page). Found this bouncing around the site which gives a good indication of the worker shortage problem: Quote:
Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff Last edited by rmnunez; Mar 17, 2006 at 02:02 am. | |
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| | #174 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | On the immigration phenomena in a globalized world, the Chinese routes: ![]() http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/797489.stm Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff |
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| | #175 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,809 | Quote:
"As a result of the demographic and epidemiological transitions in the last two decades, the age structure of the population in Mexico has undergone important transformations. The population aged 65 or older in Mexico represented about 4.5 percent of the population in 1997, but its rate of growth is increasing in time: from 2 percent annual growth in 1970 to 3.7 percent in 1990, to 3.9 percent in 1998. It is expected that the population aged 60 or older will represent about 16 percent of the total by the year 2030." http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:...s&ct=clnk&cd=6 Can Mexico afford to continue to send it's younger citizens north when it faces the same problems you envision for the U.S.? "Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen | |
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| | #176 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | Mexico really can't afford to keep losing its younger and most productive citizens to immigration, this is why Fox wisely notoriously remarked that within 10 years the US would be begging Mexico to send more people. Quote:
Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff | |
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| | #177 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,809 | Quote:
"Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen | |
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| | #178 (permalink) (top) | |
| Anarcho-capitalist Posts: 1,972 | Quote:
![]() Now after they're finished pulling the plug on this cash, the defaults will start rolling in and many of the prior independently owned properties will end in the hands of banks. I'm certain there are already a few examples of this scam in the history books. There's no way to 'win' in these games except to be the one controlling the money supply. Simply keeping what you already have is on par with a win. Freedom - are you man enough to handle it? If so, join us in New Hampshire! The Free State Project ("Liberty in our lifetime!") www.freestateproject.com Last edited by SteveA; Mar 17, 2006 at 07:43 am. | |
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| | #179 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Location: Mexico City Posts: 4,772 | Quote:
The selection of Mexico as a retirement destination is quite the practice already (see Oaxaca). Mexico will need to develop the custom of universal government-subsidized pensions for its own before they will accept working to subsidize these for foreign residents (they don't do this in the US where the practice is better established). Et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum. Raúl M. Núñez Sheriff | |
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