Immigration and the US Economy |
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In 1790, there were 4 million Americans in our first census. Today, there are 301 million in the country, a 75-fold increase. Now, what happened to that nation, which suffered from the most terrible population explosion? It became the most prosperous and influential nation in human history - so what's the problem?1 - Ben Wattenberg, Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI)2, in response to opposition to immigration, in August, 2007 "Standard economic theory predicts that the shifts in the supply of labor caused by immigration should produce some economic gains for natives. But every attempt to measure the size of those gains based on actual data shows that it is extremely small…Moreover, those gains are generated by the wage losses suffered by natives in competition with immigrants, who in the case of illegals tend to be the poorest and least-educated Americans. Lowering their wages so that the rest of society can be made imperceptibly richer is hardly sound public policy."3 - Steven Camarota, Director of Research, Center for Immigration Studies, June 2006 Introduction
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1] Randy Hall, "Report: Immigration Could Add 100 Million to US by 2060," www.cnsnews.com, August 31, 2007.
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