THE welcome accorded the 1.1m refugees arriving in Germany in 2015 is cooling fast. On January 19th 44 members of parliament in the governing coalition sent a cross letter to their boss, Angela Merkel, who is the refugees’ chief advocate. “Our country is about to be overwhelmed,” they complained. Yet more migrants may be on their way: there are 8m displaced people within Syria, and 4m more in neighbouring countries.
Humanity dictates that the rich world admit refugees, irrespective of the economic impact. But the economics of the influx still matters, not least because it colours perceptions of the new arrivals. One fear is that immigrants will compete for work and drag down wages. Another is that they will pinch the public purse.
When it comes to their pay packets, Germans need not fret. Evidence suggests that immigration has only a small impact on employment or wages. Unskilled workers and existing migrants are most vulnerable, as they are the closest substitutes for the new arrivals. But the effects are still measly. For example, a recent paper by Stephen Nickell of Oxford University and...Continue reading
Source: Business and finance http://ift.tt/1PklPXA
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