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Recent U.S. Immigration: How Big? Who? What Impact? | Economics, Applied 

Hoover Institution
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Host Steven Davis engages Wendy Edelberg and Madeline Zavodny to discuss the recent wave of U.S. immigration and some of its implications. They discuss the surge in immigration since 2021, the extent to which it reflects unlawful entry, its impact on employment growth, its fiscal consequences, and the failure of U.S. statistical authorities to accurately measure the scale of the surge in real-time. They also provide historical context by comparing recent immigration waves from Latin America to past influxes from Europe and Asia. Lastly, the guests discuss potential policy changes to raise the economic benefits of immigration and address fiscal impacts on local governments.
For more information on this episode, visit: www.hoover.org...
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ABOUT THE SPEAKERS:
Wendy Edelberg is a senior fellow in Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution, where she directs the Hamilton Project. Previously, she served as Principal Chief Economist at the Congressional Budget Office and executive director of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. She worked for the President’s Council of Economic Advisers during two administrations. She co-chairs the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s Climate and Macroeconomics Roundtable and is a member of the National Academy of Social Insurance. She earned her Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago.
Madeline Zavodny is the Donna L. Gibbs and First Coast Systems Professor of Economics at UNF. She is also a Research Fellow at the Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), Fellow at the Global Labor Organization, and Adjunct Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Her research focuses on economic issues related to immigration, including Beside the Golden Door: U.S. Immigration Reform in a New Era of Globalization (AEI Press, 2010) and The Economics of Immigration (Routledge, 2015; 2nd ed. 2021). Before joining UNF she was a professor of economics at Agnes Scott College and Occidental College and an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. She earned her Ph.D. in Economics from MIT.
Steven Davis is the Thomas W. and Susan B. Ford Senior Fellow and Director of Research at the Hoover Institution, and Senior Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR). He is an elected fellow of the Society of Labor Economists and a consultant to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. He co-founded the Economic Policy Uncertainty project, the U.S. Survey of Working Arrangements and Attitudes, the Global Survey of Working Arrangements, the Survey of Business Uncertainty, and the Stock Market Jumps project. He co-organizes the Asian Monetary Policy Forum, held annually in Singapore. Before joining Hoover, Davis was on the faculty at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
For more on this series, visit: www.hoover.org...
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The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
© 2024 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University.
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20 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 13   
@janetbaker1945
@janetbaker1945 10 часов назад
Did I miss any discussion here of the effects of immigration on the countries experiencing emigration? That is, the countries they are coming from? It's huge. We can only look at small towns across the US that are dying (Springfield was one!) from emigration of its youth to cities to understand how Mexico suffers it. I lived there for four years. I lived in a village in which there were simply no working age men. No plumbers, no electricians, no laborers. No fathers, no husbands. They have all crossed (and so many have 'second families' in the US). I did not speak Spanish well, but even I could see the efforts the Mexican government makes to stop the bleeding.
@janetbaker1945
@janetbaker1945 10 часов назад
How are you going to 'transfer' money from those benefitting from this immigration wave to those who are suffering from it? Do you mean specific taxes on specific sectors that typically hire illegal immigrants? Or what?
@christopherroberts4856
@christopherroberts4856 2 дня назад
I think the question was posed whether people who are here illegally receive benefits. The response was to clarify whether that was state or federal. I question the one panel members response as to their reluctance to accept these benefits. We are seeing CLEAR indications of widespread use of these benefits in several states.
@JoshuaGreyJensen
@JoshuaGreyJensen День назад
What benefits? They don't qualify for section 8, medicare/medicare, SNAP, or any other welfare benefits. So what are they receiving? I am genuinely asking
@benjamindover4337
@benjamindover4337 2 дня назад
Who is shipping people into the country on such an industrial scale? Is some NGO doing this? Its clear that the government is complicit in that the funding is being appropriated. Why is everyone acting like nobody knows whats going on when there must be a paper trail for all of this. The main question I have: Why is this being done? And if the purpose is to provide workers to support the aging population, then why would it be important that the immigrants be highly educated (as was suggested here)? Would it not be more appropriate that the workers be less educated so as to be available for the low level work that needs to be done?
@JoshuaGreyJensen
@JoshuaGreyJensen День назад
Every last question you asked assumes a motive. When there does not necessarily require a central motive to "bring" people here. Ask them yourself. They come here because they have family already here or know somebody and word of mouth is the grass in greener.
@danphillips4590
@danphillips4590 День назад
More economic activity, more crime
@danphillips4590
@danphillips4590 День назад
More like 10-15 million under biden
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