View Single Post
Old 03-25-2016, 01:26 PM   #10
ChinoCoug
Senior Member
 
ChinoCoug's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: NOVA
Posts: 3,005
ChinoCoug is an unknown quantity at this point
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Archaea View Post
I agree with that for citizens, but I don't agree that laborers who will work under the table so that the employer and employee can save taxes and not report everything to the detriment of employers and employees who play by the rules. You create a disincentive for anybody to play by the same rules. That's why enforcing citizenship rules is not arbitrary.

Unskilled labor may actually disappear through innovation and automation some day. At that point the undocumenteds become a greater hindrance to economic development. It is my argument that our economy does not need unskilled labor and we should eliminate incentives for there to be any who come seeking employment without skills.
If automation makes demand for unskilled labor disappear, then illegals would not come here. In fact, the current weak job market has produced a net outflow of people into Mexico.

Hispanic immigration follows the business cycle closely. The market will determine the need for skilled/unskilled labor.

Like BlueK, I can't understand why conservatives don't trust the market when it comes to Hispanics. There is a consensus among economists from the left and right on this.

Last edited by ChinoCoug; 03-25-2016 at 01:32 PM.
ChinoCoug is offline   Reply With Quote