subscribe
back issues
reprints
contact us
Wealth in Perspective
Wealth Management
Thought Leaders
Money and Meaning
Passion Investments
Wealth Management Sourcebook
Multifamily Office 2008
Previous Issues Index
/ Home / Editorial / Commentary-People / Politics, Policy & Finance /
Thought Leaders: Policy
Border Wars
Point-Counterpoint by Robert Rector and Philippe Legrain
09/01/2007

Everyone Wins
These critics rightly rage against protectionism and other harmful curbs on economic freedom. Yet favoring free trade, but not the freer movement of people who produce goods and services, is economically illiterate. Just as it is cheaper and mutually beneficial for Americans to import IT services from India, it often makes sense to import services, such as housecleaning, that have to be delivered on the spot. The fact that immigrants are here illegally is not a sign of moral turpitude, but of misguided government intervention in the labor market. Because employers cannot obtain visas for foreigners to come here legally, immigrants have no choice but to come illegally instead. The only crime committed by these enterprising people is wanting to work hard to earn a better life for themselves and their children—the epitome of the American dream.

Their efforts benefit the economy considerably. They lower production costs and thus reduce consumer prices, enabling Americans’ incomes to stretch further. They stimulate investment, because a larger labor force raises the return on capital. And their labor often complements the skills of American workers. For example, a foreign nanny may enable an American doctor to go back to work, where hard-working foreign nurses and cleaners enhance her productivity. A recent study by the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass., finds that the influx of foreign workers between 1990 and 2004 raised the average wage of U.S.-born workers by 2 percent.

Furthermore, immigrants’ children tend to be more successful than most. Look at how Irish Americans, once dismissed as a degenerate drain on society, have prospered. Latinos are already following in their footsteps.

But the biggest benefits of immigration are inherently unpredictable. Who would have guessed that, when they arrived in the United States as children, Sergey Brin would one day cofound Google and Jerry Yang, Yahoo? Who would have imagined that the son of a Kenyan who grew up herding goats could be the next U.S. president? The only certainty is that, without a green card, their chances of shining would have been dim.

1 | 2 | 3 |
Printer Friendly Version  Email a Friend


Related Articles
» Art & Culture
» Louder than Words
» Calling All Czars
» The New Irrational Exuberance
» Stressed for Success
 
FREE ISSUE! FREE GIFT!

Get your instant FREE GIFT of the top 25 QUESTIONS you must ask your advisor!

Simply fill out this form to receive a complimentary issue of Worth and a FREE GIFT. If you like it, pay just $40.00 for 9 more issues (10 in all). If it’s not for you, write ‘cancel’ on the invoice, return it, and you owe nothing! The FREE issue and FREE GIFT are yours to keep!
Name
Address

BONUS: Pay now and receive two extra issues absolutely FREE! That’s 12 issues total! (click here)

Canadian orders click here
International orders click here

Unsubscribe from subscription emails click here
 



Family Office Wealth Conference