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Thats not what its about. What I said is that GDP already includes wages. GDP measures production expenditure, which includes expenditure on wages. If hourly wages go up, ceter paribus GDP goes up. If hours worked go up, ceter paribus GDP goes up. This is also why you should subtract the immigrants own wage - it goes into GDP, but doesnt benefit natives.
If thats true, then is should already be profitable to urbanise the existing population more. And Im not sure it is all that true - as a city grows bigger, it needs more transport per person to still get everyone everywhere at even just the same velocity.
I say that? You get less, but still most. This is important in the political calculus, where there are non-economic objections to immigration, and the size of the benefit matters in addition to the sign. And it matters to all non-american first world countries.
Sure, but people in the non-local jobs are freed up to do those local ones, compensating most of the loss.
Im not sure theyre such a big deal. Maybe without immigration, every person would have gotten the same wage at home, which would lower the average in America but not for americans. So I dont think the higher wages in America relative to other countries are evidence of productivity gains from centralisation. The fact that centralisation occured is evidence for a benefit from it, but doesnt tell us how high it is. Benefits from centralisation, like pretty much all benefits from scale, are asymptotic. The US tech industry it quite big already, it propably wouldnt lose much from being split in halves.
Okay, I understand your argument about double-counting now but this is still wrong. Am immigrant's wage is the measure of how much good they've done. If I pay you $200 to do something, GDP raises by $200 and I receive at least $200 worth of value. Subtracting the wage you recieved obscures that change in value.
It is. That's why existing urban centers are trying to undo suburbanization with denser developments, more walkability, and better transit. And "more transport person" is definitely wrong. As you rise up density thresholds, instead of having fifteen people take fifteen cars you can have 30 people take a single bus. Plus, closely-packed goods and services reduce the need for transportation in general. Instead of everyone having to drive fifteen-thirty minutes to the nearest walmart, they can just walk five minutes to the corner store instead.
I'm not addressing non-economic objections to immigration because they're fundamentally unadressable. I can't make you like immigrants if you don't, no matter how good the economic benefits are, so I'm not going to try. This is just "clash of civilizations" stuff-- I think my beliefs are fundamentally adaptive and yours aren't, I think believing in and executing on xenophilia and liberalism maximizes my own personal power and that of people who share my ideology, and consequently I think we can eventually crush you and yours. I understand that you're going to try and crush me in turn, and don't blame you for that.
They are objectively a huge deal. Centralization effects are the entire reason we have "cities" in the first place instead of being evenly spread across the landscape.
But not subtracting it is an overestimate, unless you think most people produce value equal to double their wage.
Density is for the most part a political decision. More immigrants dont make cities denser, they produce more city at that same density.
Its a weak effect, but if you grow a city at constant density, the average length of trips to similar destinations will increase.
Thats fine, I dont intend to go into them. But we do try to write for a audience broader than ourselves, and its worth mentioning how things may apply to them.
That is a centralisation effect, but a different one than you talked about before, with different margins, and much less bearing on immigration.
That's fair. As I said-- I understood your point about the double counting, but I don't think we have an object-level disagreement. Let's replace the [ΔGDP PPP + ΔAvg. Wages] with a [value of services directly provided by immigrants to natives + inflation avoided - compensation native workers fail to receive because immigrants did their jobs for them] term. It's harder to quantify that exactly-- but I think we can both agree that it's almost certainly highly correlated with ΔGDP PPP. We might have to disagree on the last term if you think it's negative though. I think "avoided compensation" rounds out to ~0 after taking into account the increased demand for services immigrants require and the fact that in an immigrant-heavy economy native workers are still advantaged when it comes to management and high-skill roles even if skills are exactly the same.
There are political decisions that intentionally restrict density-- nimby zoning laws, for example, but they're ineffective at totally preventing density. My city has recently been growing, and as a result I'm seeing empty lots get built up into 4-over-1 apartment buildings. That doesn't just mean more residents, and more traffic-- it means more businesses being supported in the same amount of space.
Look-- do you actually live in a city? Not a suburb-- and actual city? Because it sounds like your experience is just completely at odds with mine.
Not really. There's no fundamental difference between types of immigration, whether the borders being crosses are municipal, state, or national. People aggregate into similar spots for all the same reasons the world over.
Yeah, I think the best approach here is to find some multiplier for GDP to estimate total surplus, maybe with detailed economic study of some sample branches, and then just use that multiplied ΔGDP - his wage. GDP already includes native wages as well, so well never need a decision on that effect in isolation.
The entire country of Austria has 8M inhabitants. Our biggest city is Vienna, 2M. The others are all below 0.5M. So, I would say I live in a city, but its propably Bumfuck, Alabama by your standards. But I dont think the facts here are especially inaccessible to outsiders. Really, smaller cities usually densify more from growth than large ones.
...and that is why the entire US population lives in one contiguous metro area. Or does it? What you initially described was something pretty specific: an entire industry concentrating in one place, benefitting from a unified pool of workers. That effect is real, if IMO not very strong at the relevant margin, and really does require international immigration, because the US alone couldnt produce tech workers for the whole global tech industry without serious quality loss.
Meanwhile, there are great returns to urbanisation if you start out evenly distributed, but that doesnt mean of anything in our actual situation.
Apparently it's 9m now, but wow my general assumption based on size was off by about 3x. Didn't really get how much of the southwest is pure mountain until I checked a map.
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