Business Rich, western countries face a stark choice: 6-day workweeks or more immigration, top economist warns

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A specter is haunting Europe — the specter of aging.

Many Western countries are facing what the World Bank calls a “profound demographic crisis”: The twin perils of an aging population and record-low fertility rates are predicted to send their populations plunging in the coming decades.

The worst consequences of this demographic shift, per the World Bank, are economic. Soon, the shrinking working population in the U.S., Canada, or Germany won’t be able to meet their own constant demands for high-quality goods and services. These rich, elderly countries will have to make a hard choice for economic survival: force people to work more, or allow immigrants to fill in?

Lant Pritchett, one of the world’s top thinkers on developmental economics, has seen this crisis coming for decades over his career at Harvard, the World Bank, and Oxford University, where he currently heads a research lab. He told Fortune his radical plan to stave off economic disaster.

Population decline
In the long run, without intervention, the UN predicts that a decline in population growth could cascade into a full-on population “collapse.” That collapse is not likely to occur until well into the next century – if it comes at all. However, in the short run, population decline presents a real, and relatively simple economic problem: the West soon won’t have enough workers.

The ratio of working-age people to elderly people in rich countries will soon become so diminished that support for elders will be unaffordable. In Japan, a nation already facing the consequences of a graying population, the average cost of nursing care is projected to increase 75% in the next 30 years, with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida warning that the nation is on “the brink.” In the U.S., think tanks have warned, an older population with more retirees means a shrinking tax base and higher demands on programs like Social Security and Medicare, along with a smaller number of working-age people to pay into those programs.

In short, we have a “ticking time bomb” on our hands, in the words of Greece’s prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, whose government introduced a six-day workweek last month to address the nation’s labor shortages. The move prompted fury and protests among workers as they watched their German and Belgian cousins embrace four-day workweeks.

Indeed, even as some European countries and a few American companies flirt with working less, panicked economists and politicians are sounding the alarm: We need to work more. A study conducted by consulting firm Korn Ferry found that by 2030, there will be a global human talent shortage of more than 85 million people, roughly equivalent to the population of Germany. That talent shortage could slash $8.5 trillion from nations’ expected revenues, affecting highly educated sectors such as financial services and IT as well as manufacturing jobs, which are considered “lower skilled” and require less education.

Now is the time to act, economic veteran Pritchett told Fortune. But doing so involves some radical rethinking of the current immigration debate.

Classical economics offers a number of ways to address a labor shortage, Prichett said. Since most of the unfilled jobs are “unskilled,” or don’t require a degree to complete, one solution for businesses and governments is to invest in automation, essentially having robots fill the gap. But, while automation helps get the jobs done, it depresses human workers’ wages by decreasing the amount of jobs available, “exacerbating” the issue, Pritchett said.

Some have called for increasing wages to induce more people to work. But most of the working-age population in the U.S. is already employed. Despite a well-documented decline in the portion of working-age men with jobs over the past few decades, Prichett said that the vast majority of working-age men are working, meaning raising pay would have small effects at best. There’s room for more women to work, he noted, but that could take away from other important responsibilities that are overwhelmingly shunted to women, such as caring for family or raising children.

That leaves two other options: forcing workers to work more or allowing an influx of legal, controlled immigration.

Why a six-day week won’t work
Mitsotakis’ plan for a six-day-work week is a step in the right direction for the short term, Pritchett said.

But “economics is not just about direction: It’s about magnitude,” he added. In other words, he says, small policy tweaks won’t do it. If we’re trying to address a big, structural problem with the U.S. labor force, the solution needs to be ambitious and comprehensive—precisely the type of legislation American politicians have largely avoided in recent years.

If policymakers simply try to make everyone work an additional day, the math simply won’t work out in the long run, Pritchett said. Even if Greece has “fantastic success” and increases its working hours by 10% over the next 30 years, that growth would represent a “drop in the bucket” in fighting a worsening labor shortage. He calculated a demographic labor force gap of 232 million people globally in his most recent paper, even assuming the highest possible labor force participation rate.

“You can’t solve a problem that’s growing over time with [a labor force] that has an upward bound,” he said. You would have to keep the labor force working more and more, and even then, you would never be able to fill in the gap.

Pritchett has a better idea. He knows that the current immigration debate is fraught, since the West is concerned with the social ramifications of allowing more migrants into its borders. But he maintains the only way to solve rich countries’ labor problem is to let in immigrants to work, particularly from countries where population growth is increasing, such as Nigeria or Tanzania, rather than decreasing.

In his view, the Western debate on immigration has taken on an unnecessarily binary flavor, with the choice depicted as one between a path to citizenship or closed borders. In a recent article titled “The political acceptability of time-limited labor mobility,” Pritchett says the West will soon have to abandon this view. Instead, he advocates for developed nations to embrace a system where immigrants can come to their country to work for a limited time – while also buying goods and services, renting homes, starting companies, and hiring workers — and then go back home, leaving both parties wealthier.

The future of immigration is temporary
The truth, Pritchett said, is that the U.S. needs low-skilled migrants, and many migrants need the economic boost from working in the U.S. Immigration is a symbiotic relationship that the West cannot quit – that’s why it’s so hard for us to actually control our borders.

“The way to secure the border is to create a legitimate way for people and firms to get the labor that the economy really needs in legitimate, legal ways, and until we have that, the whole debate over the wall and stuff is just silly,” Pritchett said.

If anything, the intensifying crackdown on undocumented and legal migration since the late 1980s has led to mass settlement, according to Hein de Haas, a sociologist of immigration. Prior to the 1980s, the U.S. and Mexico enjoyed a relationship similar to the work-visa program Pritchett envisions. Mexicans freely flowed across the border, coming for a short time to work, returning home to enjoy their money, and sometimes repeating this journey over several years, Haas wrote. They never permanently settled because, knowing they could come and go as they pleased, they did not have to.

The U.S. facilitated this temporary migration programs specifically aimed at Mexicans, encouraging contract workers to come to the U.S. after World War I and II. The second of these,the Bracero Program, established a treaty for the temporary employment of Mexican farmworkers in the U.S., and was so popular that it was extended far beyond its initial lifespan, allowing nearly 5 million Mexicans to temporarily work in the U.S. from 1942 to 1964. (The program ended in 1965, when the U.S. sharply limited immigration from Latin America as part of a major overhaul of immigration laws.)

What Pritchett suggests isn’t too dissimilar from simply turning the clock back to a time when migrants could move and work freely. He proposes a fixed-term system: a worker comes to the U.S. with the understanding that they are not on a path to citizenship, works on a 3-year contract, and then returns to their home country. After an “off period” of six months to a year, the migrant could come back for another three years.

“There are a billion people on the planet who would come to the U.S. under those terms,” Pritchett said. “But we don’t have that available.”

He isn’t exaggerating about the billion. In a 2010 survey, Gallup asked people around the world whether they would like to temporarily move to work in another country. Some 1.1 billion responded “yes,” including 41% of the 15-to-24 population and 28% of those aged 25-44, Pritchett sa

“What you could make in America in three years and go back to Senegal with is a fortune compared to anything else you could do to make your way in Senegal,” he added. “You go back to Senegal, you build a house, you buy your own business, and you’ve transformed your life by working temporarily.”

To avoid potential labor shortages in sending nations, Pritchett’s system would depend on bilateral agreements between the host and sending countries, and nations “could choose to put limits on their participation” to address their own labor needs, Pritchett said.

Meanwhile, the U.S. would receive fresh batches of workers for service industries, elderly care, or manufacturing—essentially, all the jobs that would be otherwise unfilled.

Policies like these are not yet being discussed on the national stage, but Pritchett believes that will soon change. With the upcoming labor shortage and the unpopularity of forcing workers to toil for longer, politicians will have to expand their understanding of immigration to allow for policies like his. For now, he’s planting the seed.

In partnership with economist Rebekah Smith, Pritchett has started an organization called Labor Mobility Partnerships (LaMP) that aims to build political support for a temporary rotational migration system. The way he sees it, nothing will change by pitching the idea to politicians (“who tend to be followers, not leaders”) so instead, he is working with countries that are currently already expanding their immigration channels, like Spain.

He is also courting business leaders in sectors that will be the hardest hit by labor shortages, such as elderly care, who could “be potentially a powerful force” in explaining to politicians why policies like his are necessary.

“Ideas at times are like dams: huge, unmoving, impregnable, able to hold the water back forever,” Pritchett writes in the conclusion of his paper. “But a small, strategically placed crack can cause a dam to be washed away overnight.”

https://fortune.com/2024/08/04/rich...eeks-or-more-immigration-top-economist-warns/ (Archive)
 
Fuck you no.
I will not stay in the wagie cagie for 6 days and I will not allow for my work to be devalued by 3rd worlders just so some boomer 401k can stay at line go up.
The last 30ish years have been a cruel social experiment to reduce the value of labor and the quality of goods to the absolute minimum required for society to function.

And it worked, those behind that saw incredible profits in doing so.

But it wasn't enough.

They want infinite profit.

They want line go up.

They want more every quarter than last.

And they are now, foolishly, but unsurprisingly, cutting their way below "functioning society" levels as the only way to wring more blood from the stone.

And as we cross that line? As the competency crisis gets worse? (Because that's EXPENSIVE) We're going to see more of these bizarre ideas, touted by experts, as the solution that we're just "one easy fix!" away from stopping the slide to the bottom. Which will fully arrive when people realize that just NOT working doesn't leave them any worse off than working for the absolute minimum of a meager handful of beans while their taxes buy steak for illegal immigrants.

Why not just kill the old instead.
They'd love to, if not for the fact they are already over the limit of whatever their expert analysis has determined "too old to consume enough" is.

(Ninja'd by Absolutego)
 
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Author was born in 1959, that's why

AGAIN: YOU DO NOT HATE BABY BOOMERS ENOUGH
Killing the old is a much more utilitarian solution than working the young to death.

I think the elderly should have a long fucking think before proposing bullshit like this whilst treating "we'll keep paying the pensions of the old and their healthcare too" as some sort of inviolable postulate.
 
Killing the old is a much more utilitarian solution than working the young to death.

I think the elderly should have a long fucking think before proposing bullshit like this whilst treating "we'll keep paying the pensions of the old and their healthcare too" as some sort of inviolable postulate.
If you told me in 10 years' time there were some mass killings of old people I honestly wouldn't be that surprised.
Legit worst generation, I can't wait for (most of) them to be dead.
There are a few good eggs but overall they are utterly contemptible.
 
Bullshit

There was. A couple years ago. Small thing called Covid, you might have heard of it..
As I recall, the education and welfare of children across first world nations was sacrificed, along with the economic growth of many of the same countries, via almost two years of lockdowns specifically to stop old cunts dying and to prevent nature's way of pruning the dead branches from the population.

Covid did not kill as many of them as it should have, and every other national priority was thrown on to the fire to keep them warm.

Think anyone will agree to that again if the next pandemic flu disproportionately offs old people?

I won't stay in my fucking house for two years again unless they impose actual martial law. Fuck that. Let the elderly bodies hit the floor.
 
The Boomer Remover drastically underperformed, all the old fucks fucking up everything in western society survived, we just lost a few actors, oh no!
There's a guy in my hometown owner of a local pub who's at least 450 pounds and chain smokes despite being on an oxygen tank, suffering from liver failure and diabeetus.

Guy got Covid and two weeks later was in Vegas playing slots completely fine. My 93 year old grandmother shrugged it off as well.

I'm not even sure I believe the official death numbers the feds put out because all the sick and old people in my life chewed it up and spit it out.
 
Bollocks. The immigrants DONT make a net positive unless they’re vetted and highly skilled. There are a few nationalities in Denmark where they did a study that turn out to be net contributors. The rest are a massive drain on society.
These people tell us we shouldn’t have kids for the planet, then they tell us we need immigration to prop up the Ponzi schemes. Then they import people who don’t work or contribute.
They’re lying. The carrying capacity of most of our nations is probably well exceeded, and we cannot grow indefinitely and have a good quality of life. We HAVE to let the population remain homogenous and fall gently, and then reach a new equilibrium.
 
Wait a minute!
Hold the FUCK UP!
So they predict the value of the worker will increase, as there will be labour shortages. At the same time they believe they will be able fuck the worker over even harder??

Never change, blood sucking kikes. Never change.
 
Well I guess that's what happens when you have nearly two centuries of steady technological improvement - you gots to work harder.

Or maybe it's a massive shift of the proportion of people doing useful work away to make-work, leaving a lower ratio of useful work per capita than in the past.
 
"Sorry, folks, it's either slavery or rape to keep that number going up. You have no other choices."

The last 30ish years have been a cruel social experiment to reduce the value of labor and the quality of goods to the absolute minimum required for society to function.

Don't forget the social experiment of incentivizing people to delay family formation as long as possible. Twenty-five is too young to start a family! Your twenties are for having fun! It's healthy and normal to have your first child at 35! Think of the GDP!
 
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