Ezra Klein usually can be counted on for good insights on politics and the economy, however today’s piece on immigration is the sort of thing that could have been on a press release from Fix the Debt. The basic point is to tout the virtues of immigration. While there are benefits of immigration that Klein rightly highlights, much of the piece veers off into the sort of pablum readers expect from the non-Klein portions of the Post.
This is especially the case where Klein dives off into demographics.
“The economic case for immigration is best made by way of analogy. Everyone agrees that aging economies with low birth rates are in trouble; this, for example, is a thoroughly conventional view of Japan. It’s even conventional wisdom about the U.S. The retirement of the baby boomers is correctly understood as an economic challenge. The ratio of working Americans to retirees will fall from 5 to 1 today to 3 to 1 in 2050. Fewer workers and more retirees is tough on any economy.”
Klein then adds, “there’s nothing controversial about that analysis.”
Actually everything about that analysis is controversial, including the basic facts. (Actually, these are just wrong.) The current ratio of workers to retirees is 2.8 to 1, it hasn’t been 5 to 1 since the early 1960s. It is projected to fall to 2.0 to 1 by the mid 2030s.
This is not just a gottcha, it shows the fallacy of Klein’s basic point. We have already seen a sharp decline in the ratio of workers to retirees, yet even people who follow the economy and economic policy closely, like Klein, were apparently not even aware of this fact. Since this decline is never cited as factor causing our current economic problems, why would we think the comparatively mild decline in this ratio projected for future decades will be a large burden?
The reality is that the benefits from even modest productivity growth swamp the negative impact of a declining ratio of workers to retirees. This graph compares the benefits of productivity growth to the negative impact of the projected demographic change over the next two decades.
Source: Author’s calculations.
These calculations assume that retirees benefits are equal to 85 percent of the average wage, an amount that is much higher than is actually the case. in the United States It is also worth noting that 2035 is the worst possible year for demographics, since after that date the ratio of workers to retirees stabilizes for the rest of the century. On the other hand productivity keeps growing.
Even in this worst year, in the worst case scenario where productivity growth averages just 1.0 percent (roughly the rate during the 1973-1995 slowdown), the gains from productivity growth between now and 2035 will be more than three times as large as the burden from the decline in the ratio of workers to retirees. In the case of 1.5 percent productivity growth, which is closer to what we have actually been seeing, the ratio of benefits to burden is 5 to 1. And, if we got back to our 2.0 percent golden age rate of productivity growth the ratio of benefits to burden would be over 7 to 1. In short, the arithmetic doesn’t support the demographic disaster story.
There is a deeper issue on this one that just reflects a bizarre worldview. Many of us have noticed global warming and other ways in which the planet is straining from the impact of humans. As a general rule, fewer people will mean less strain. Why should we be troubled by a stagnant or declining population? It is especially bizarre that people claim this is a problem for Japan, which is a very densely populated country.
It’s true that a declining population means that labor will be in shorter supply. That means that the least productive jobs will go unfilled. That is the way economies develop and the reason that half of our workforce is no longer employed in agriculture. In the U.S. this would mean that we might have fewer restaurants and the convenience stores won’t be open all night. In Japan, perhaps they won’t be able to find workers to shove people into the subway cars in Tokyo. What’s the problem?
Klein is correct that the arguments he lays out tend not to be controversial in Washington policy circles. But this is not a very thoughtful group of people. Remember these are the people who could not see an $8 trillion housing bubble. They have not gotten any more curious or creative in their thinking in the last 5 years.
This is not to argue against immigration or immigration reform. The way we treat people who came to this country to work, in accordance with policy (sorry, the folks in Washington knew we had immigrants working in the country off the books — this was policy) is an outrage and is bad for the economy. However readers deserve a more serious discussion of the issues involved.
Some immigration to the country undoubtedly provides economic benefits. However in nearly all cases there will be winners and losers. For example, a large flow of immigrants at the low-end of the labor force will hurt the people who have recently immigrated to the country. Some of us may not consider that a good thing. On the other hand, a large flow of very highly educated immigrants, such as doctors, can get the wages of these workers more in line with the wages of professionals in other wealthy countries and provide large savings in areas like health care. (This is a great way to go for people who are worried about those long-term deficit projections.)
Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economy and Policy Research. He also writes a regular blog, Beat the Press, where this post originally appeared.
Image from Wesley Fryer licensed under Creative Commons




16 Comments

Different and interesting.
Yeah, the demographic hand-wringing of the Very Serious People is getting super annoying. There aren’t nearly enough jobs for the people here now so what is the point of clamoring for 3X as many workers in the future?
Ezra Klein usually can be counted on for good insights on politics and the economy, …
Assumes facts not in evidence!!
Superb Post. But expect a lot of flack here because:
Our mass immigration/amnesties are right out of the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal. Yet many progressives support them because the 1% have cleverly packaged them in the language of diversity, racial tolerance, etc. Hence the unholy (though hardly unique) alliance between Democratic politicians who want votes and CEOs who want cheap labor.
More highly educated immigrants would help the economy, but would threaten the incomes of the elites who are running the show. That’s why it won’t happen.
You statement about humans straining the planet won’t go over well here. It doesn’t help further a lot of favorite blame games.
We need to stop seeing immigration thru the eyes of the words on the Statue of Liberty. We’re not that country anymore – because we are mature.
It’s all about wage suppression. Why wouldn’t you expect a Democratic Party tool like Ezra Klein to be shilling for it? Nothing more natural can be imagined.
We’re well past mature. We’re overripe. By importing the third world in from the periphery of the Empire, they can pay us like we’re Chinese and treat us the same way they treat campesinos in Guatemala and villagers in Afghanistan. They dilute solidarity in order to destroy wages, and as they destroy wages they dilute solidarity. Before you know it, you can’t speak the same language as the guy next to you in the workplace (plus, talking is forbidden during work hours!) and you live with a gun and a camera pointed at you 24×7.
Yep, well put.
Book Salon up with Charles Euchner’s Nobody Turn Me Around: A People’s History of the 1963 March on Washington hosted by Toure Reed
Might we be going about this the wrong way?
Suppose today’s international boundary trope had been something we simply inherited over a few centuries. That is, today what remains would be habitual boundaries as a residue of bigotry, protectionism, paranoia, exploitation, unjust leverage for some PTBs, and other toxic urges. We’ve become imprisoned by it.
So why not start from scratch? There are probably several valid reasons for certain immigration controls yet which aren’t, in the end, malevolent. For me the most rational constraint would be to contain a budding pandemic — I’m mindful that example, alone, would be too fluid to satify diehards who want their perks foremost.
There would have to be other gatekeepers as well, and I have no idea what they all would be. The idea is to challenge all of the borders regime which has been in place for so long, and have it revalidate every bit of what’s on the map and in the lawbooks for so long, and open up where possible.
Then, exceptions to mostly open and welcoming borders would have to be justified by today’s standards. The EU tried this with the Schengen agreements, but that was the Model T, and even it is failing among the attitudes of Europeans nowadays. Maybe we could do them a step better.
I don’t suggest a starting point for brand new immigration standards other than perhaps safeguards against a pandemic threat, which I’ll admit is somewhat an outlier day to day (though valid). Going forward I doubt the rest of the map what we’ve grown up with would withstand scrutiny.
Question about productivity gains: The average American worker today is about 3 times as productive as the average worker in the 1950s. Yet we’ve lost nearly all the substantive things that workers had back then: the ability to support a household on one income, lifetime security in one job, cheap college education, affordable health insurance, pensions, etc., etc. (However, to be fair, we do have plenty of insidious little electronic gadgets that they didn’t have.)
So how can we depend on productivity gains to provide anything of benefit for the 99% in the future? Don’t get me wrong. Immigration has traditionally been used to keep wages down in the U.S., so that’s no answer. But just as the benefits of immigration accrue to the 1%, so — apparently — do the benefits of increased productivity, while the costs in both cases are borne by the rest of us.
Today’s Up With Chris Hayes was devoted to immigration. I had to switch it off because it was painful to watch Chris and the mostly liberal panel engage in the kind of mental gyrations it takes to hold views that completely contradict each other.
True. I think people understand, at least on an intuitive level, that the gains of productivity are not now and will not be going to them and their families and are adjusting their fertility rates accordingly. Thus, the birthrate panic of the plutocrats. “We cut your wages and are working furiously to demolish the retirement safety net but why aren’t you having more babies?”
… good comment … goes and gets to the middle
I wonder if the author of this post sent a link to Klein?
But productivity growth does not put payroll tax dollars into the ss trustfund for the olds.