Recent discussions on immigration highlight its positive impact on economic growth in the U.S. Various sources emphasize the benefits of immigrants in boosting GDP, entrepreneurship rates, and overall workforce productivity. The Congressional Budget Office projects a slight decrease in per capita GDP due to increased immigration.
"A rise in the number of people ready and willing to work is not the only economic benefit," @crampell writes. Immigrants are also associated with other positive growth effects, including higher entrepreneurship rates. https://t.co/6YCgCUt8tg https://t.co/NisQyA9Xso
Excellent read here on how immigrants help build strong economies. $7 trillion strong. https://t.co/BDJWItrXl8
If you look at the evidence frequently cited for American industrial decline, "you will see that it’s mostly about manufacturing employment. It’s not about how much we’re making, but about how many people are making it." Getting more productive isn't bad. https://t.co/XH2USPz4Ph
A Hayekian perspective on immigration advocates for policies that acknowledge the economic benefits of a diverse and dynamic workforce. @VanceGinn at #EconLog: https://t.co/s7n69xgrB3
"the CBO expects per capita GDP to be 0.8% less a decade from now than it would have been without the increase in immigration." MOAR IMMIGRATION! https://t.co/ay0ZgcdD0B
Immigration Wave Delivers Economic Windfall. This is why I get my news from the @WSJ (I skip the @WSJopinion pages). Balanced reporting, stating the facts, as well as what we don’t know w/out a mention of “what it means for Biden”. https://t.co/qSbfVIIOPL
“The reality is that immigrants and immigration are critical to economic growth and critical to the U.S.’s comparative advantage to other countries.” https://t.co/F8Squ9gaFE