StevenG, on 2021-July-22, 09:31, said:
Why do you not actually read what I said and think about the economic argument? You just seem to filter anything you instictively disagree with through your own lens. (You never used to be like this; I always thought you one of the more sensible commentators here.)
I do not have any desire to get rid of you from the UK. There is no problem with itinerant mathematicians. I am horrified by the way this appalling government treats people who have built a life here, whether that's Windrush or EU citizens or anyone else in a similar position. I do not wish to expel anybody, merely move to a system that creates a better life for people who are already here.
I would have no problem of freedom of movement at all if it did not result in a significant inflow. What I do object to, as I said in my previous post, is the distortion it creates in the labour market. I have watched this country get poorer over my entire adult life, and I believe that inefficiencies in the labour market are a significant cause. (I worked this out about 30 years ago, and nothing I've seen since has changed my mind.)
Since you are a better mathematician than I am, could you please explain how importing people to do non-essential jobs that do not create any wealth can do other than reduce resources for people for are already here. And can you explain how a system that seems to always create a need for more labour than is available is sustainable in the long term.
In what world does the hospitality industry not create wealth?????
Take a look at the very rich people who own hotel chains
Take a look at the owners of successful restaurants
Take a look at the homes built for and purchased or rented by hospitality workers
Take a look at the food and beverage industries, much of which is devoted to selling, at a profit, to the hospitality industry
Take a look at literally everyone who earns income directly or indirectly from the hospitality industry. What do you think they’re doing with their money! Stuffing it under a mattress or spending/investing it (spending if they are low income, spending and investing otherwise)
What about the taxes the industry and its employees, owners, suppliers etc pay
Btw, what do you do?
I was a lawyer for 40+ years. A lot of my clients got a lot of money from my services. A lot of my clients had to pay out a lot of money (I did a lot of work for insurance companies). But all I was doing was facilitating the transfer of money, with a little of it coming my way. So do lawyers create wealth?
Anyone who participates in an economic activity, in respect of which they employ people, and/or pay suppliers, etc is creating wealth.
So we are not mining ore or growing crops. But I buy things directly or, more commonly, indirectly from those who do. Without money from my activities I couldn’t buy anything, so my activities lead to opportunity for those who, in your bizarre worldview are creating wealth. Am I not then also creating wealth
And my point is that the hospitality industry is a significant wealth creator.
As for low paying jobs, a free market allows ‘foreigners’ (aka human beings) to make more money in the UK than they could back home. By sending some of that money back home, they are increasing, albeit slowly and in tiny ways, the economic well-being of their home country. That in turn will, over time, open up more opportunities there, and diminish the attraction of being a ‘foreign’ worker.
Meanwhile, your own argument makes zero sense. If the labour market was being flooded by immigrants, to the point that native-born workers refuse to work at those jobs, where are they working! Because the UK doesn’t seem to me, historically, to have suffered from unusually high levels of unemployment. So they’ve mostly found jobs.
Of course, you have pretty much given away the real point. Xenophobia
Btw, while I’m Canadian, I as born and raised in England so I’m not a stranger to English culture. I went to a ‘public school’ and was a member of the middle class, with all of the prejudices that went, back then, with that status.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari