Market-Based Solutions to Immigration Would Benefit Millions Around the Globe, New Book Examines
OAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 7, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Few topics in current affairs are as contentious as immigration. Yet despite the controversies, social scientists who study immigration largely agree about its effects, whatever differences they may have about how a nation should change its policies. Their findings are usually buried in academic journals accessible only to other scholars.
Now, readers can learn the substance of this vast body of research, thanks to the publication of The Economics of Immigration: Market-Based Approaches, Social Science, and Public Policy, edited by Independent Institute Senior Fellow Benjamin Powell.
"It is my sincere hope that this volume can help bring some reasonable dispassionate discourse to a policy debate that is so often emotionally charged and devoid of decent scientific evidence," Powell writes.
Part I evaluates the literature on immigration and wages, employment, economic growth, government spending and revenues, cultural and civic assimilation, and work visas, with each chapter assessing strengths and weaknesses of various studies, highlighting the best scholarship currently available, and discerning the scholarly consensus on each topic.
Part II features policy recommendations. These include a "market-based" approach designed to improve efficiency, fairness, and economic growth; a "pro-assimilation" approach that would reduce immigration but legalize immigrants who are in the United States illegally; and a "radical" case for open borders, which draws on moral principles of philosophical traditions as well as empirical research.
Findings:
- Large numbers of economically empowered immigrants would remit more money to relatives back home, and the non-immigrants would enjoy access to goods and services made possible by the larger labor force.
- Economists estimate that a policy of open borders for wealthy countries could add $50 trillion to $150 trillion to the world's economy.
- Immigrants are not a major fiscal drain on the federal treasury. Careful studies find that immigration results in either a slight fiscal gain or a slight fiscal drain.
Immigration policy merits serious study by everyone who expresses an opinion on the subject, and also warrants goodwill toward diverse thinkers putting forth bold reforms in good faith. As Powell writes, "Potential immigrants, our countrymen, and our descendants deserve as much."
Independent Institute is a non-profit, research and educational organization that promotes the power of independent thinking to boldly advance peaceful, prosperous, and free societies grounded in a commitment to human worth and dignity.
SOURCE Independent Institute
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