Joseph Walker on Australian migration (from my email)

 [[{“value”:”I argued a few days ago that attacks on less skilled immigration might spill over and through contagion effects cause negative attitudes about immigration more generally.  At which point I received the following from Joseph: Australia, I think, shows the contagion effects are a big deal. We have one of the most skill-biased immigration programs
The post Joseph Walker on Australian migration (from my email) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.”}]] 

I argued a few days ago that attacks on less skilled immigration might spill over and through contagion effects cause negative attitudes about immigration more generally.  At which point I received the following from Joseph:

Australia, I think, shows the contagion effects are a big deal.

We have one of the most skill-biased immigration programs in the world and also one of the most successful approaches to cultural integration in the world.

A significant chunk of our net migration comes in the form of overseas students, who can be put on a pathway to permanent residence and citizenship after completing their degrees. (This program was introduced in 2001, largely to slow our population ageing.)

The international students cross-subsidise the domestic ones, and education is now Australia’s third biggest export after coal and iron ore.

Like the rest of the Anglosphere, our housing market is broken, but this can’t mostly be blamed on international students, since they don’t add to demand for the kinds of housing people are concerned about.

And yet the discourse has soured completely on migrants, especially international students.

A lot of Australian influencers copy and paste US anti-immigration talking points, even though they don’t really map over.*

(As it happens, I’ll be interviewing one of the key architects of Australia’s modern migration system in a live salon in January: https://events.humanitix.com/joe-walker-podcast-abul-rizvi.)

*To be sure, there are valid criticisms of Australian migration policy. Most notably, net migration was mismanaged and unsustainably high over the past two years, driven by a post-pandemic surge in students. In 2022-23, it exceeded 500,000 people (for context: this number is unprecedented and about double pre-pandemic levels). There has also been exuberance and an erosion of academic standards in the university sector. But these mistakes are being addressed, and the broader negativity I’m observing seems unlikely to be appeased by fixing them.

The post Joseph Walker on Australian migration (from my email) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

 Current Affairs, Political Science 


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