Exodus: how migration changes our world
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This is one of the most pressing and controversial issues of our time, causing hot spores and deeply impregnated by ideology. Who should be allowed to immigrate, and who does not mean? What are the arguments for and against the restriction of the number of immigrants? In the "outcome" outstanding economist Paul collier clearly and compressed describes the consequences of stimulating or deterring migration. Based on the original study and numerous reviews of specific cases, he considers this problem from three points of view: Migrants themselves, whose people they left, and societies in which they immigrate. As the collier shows, immigrants from the poorest countries of the world are usually the most educated and ambitious. And although these people often achieve economic success, leaving their native countries, they also deprive these countries of professionals in which they are in dire need. In the absence of control, immigration can only accelerate: the poorest countries will face a real mass outcome. Immigration is a simple economic equation, but it has difficult consequences. "Exodus" shows how important immigration and its consequences for public policy will be in the coming years and decades. The book was released with the support of the Liberal Mission Foundation
Author:
Author:Collier P.
Cover:
Cover:Hard
Category:
- Category:Politics & Social Science
ISBN:
ISBN:978-5-93255-452-4
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