Nobody is saying they are not mostly decent hard working people, the point that that economist in the above link made WRT German productivity is that low wage employees make it less likely that businesses will reach for more technology that, in the end, will be much cheaper.
Machinery can be incredible. I was walking the other day and saw a farmer bale an entire field of straw in about 30mins. He just drove along, the trailer raked up the straw and shot the bales out the other end, all tied up. Not sure how much the thing cost but would he have brought it if he had easy access to 10 low paid workers for a day? What do we want to pursue, a high tech Japan/US/German economy or a Bangladesh style one?
You also have to consider how much a job really contributes to the useful economy. Some do necessary jobs but not all. How many nail bars, Polish food shops, car washes, leafletting companies etc. do we really need? Migration also creates its own demands. We may need more doctors and house builders but that is in part because migration gives us more patients and more demand for housing.
As I've said before, basic maths. You don't raise an average by adding more of average value. Migrants grow the GDP but that increased GDP is divided among a similarly increased population - none of us are any better off. Our resources, like housing, cannot possibly be expanded to keep pace with the population increase.
Machinery can be incredible. I was walking the other day and saw a farmer bale an entire field of straw in about 30mins. He just drove along, the trailer raked up the straw and shot the bales out the other end, all tied up. Not sure how much the thing cost but would he have brought it if he had easy access to 10 low paid workers for a day? What do we want to pursue, a high tech Japan/US/German economy or a Bangladesh style one?
You also have to consider how much a job really contributes to the useful economy. Some do necessary jobs but not all. How many nail bars, Polish food shops, car washes, leafletting companies etc. do we really need? Migration also creates its own demands. We may need more doctors and house builders but that is in part because migration gives us more patients and more demand for housing.
As I've said before, basic maths. You don't raise an average by adding more of average value. Migrants grow the GDP but that increased GDP is divided among a similarly increased population - none of us are any better off. Our resources, like housing, cannot possibly be expanded to keep pace with the population increase.
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