That’s great, hopefully this accelerates. Too much migration just drives up living costs, stresses medical capacity, and drives wages down for many.
That’s great, hopefully this accelerates. Too much migration just drives up living costs, stresses medical capacity, and drives wages down for many.
You’re assuming everything else can’t grow to absorb the demand.
In general it does - new housing, job creation, all of it.
What you’re really seeing is when something - often policy - gets in the way and a place ends up underbuilt.
It’s still a problem but it’s one with different solutions.
It can but it takes a very long time to bring food online. To develop real estate.
Especially when the real numbers of immigrants is much higher.
It takes time to train more doctors, to raise more cattle, and to build more homes. Way more than the rate of immigration over the last 30 years.
It makes rich families richer though. But it hasn’t been good for working people and the community culture the country once had.
More people creates more economic activity and higher productivity, which is deflationary. Fewer people lowers productivity and depresses economic activity, causing inflation. You have it backwards - the real economy is not a closed system with fixed amounts of positions and finite money needing zero sum thinking.
And it’s a good thing all that wealth is evenly distributed and not hoarded nearly exclusively by a small class of families.
I can assure you mass immigration is not good for the working class families of this country despite what an economist might say in aggregate. The reality is more people drives up the costs of food, shelter, medicine, and other resources that are not very elastic.
Don’t overthink it.