Primeiro:
There is no such thing as a labor shortage in a large market economy. This is due to a concept called the wage mechanism. There are two curves called supply and demand which intersect at a point that determines the wage.
— Eric Weinstein (@EricRWeinstein) November 15, 2024
You are probably confusing this with a centrally planned… https://t.co/D7kw5hf5r6
Segundo:
Here is the paper we discussed at NBER. The first line is literally this:
— Eric Weinstein (@EricRWeinstein) November 15, 2024
“Long term labor shortages do not happen naturally in market economies.”
You said “Obviously.”
We last discussed it in Arizona. October 24, 2019 when we both spoke. Am I imagining this Larry? pic.twitter.com/zbPqe6aoGx
Terceiro:
I’ve been playing this game with them for 30+ years. They don’t want wages to rise. I do. He says “bottlenecks” because he knows the game. So do I.
— Eric Weinstein (@EricRWeinstein) November 15, 2024
Sublinho "They don’t want wages to rise."
Ou seja: Não existe falta de mão-de-obra. O que existe é falta mão-de-obra barata. Não percebo como a esquerda não percebe isto.
"To get an idea of expert opinion on this topic, consider the 1990 testimony of Dr. Michael S. Teitelbaum, later to become Vice-Chairman of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform and considered by many, the foremost expert on the migration of the highly skilled:
"...the very phrase itself, "labor shortage" provokes puzzlement or amazement among most informed analysts of U.S. labor markets. "
"[To attract] workers, the employer may have to increase his wage offer. ... So when you hear an employer saying he needs immigrants to fill a "labor shortage", remember what you are hearing: a cry for a labor subsidy to allow the employer to avoid the normal functioning of the labor market." (fonte)
-1990 Congressional Testimony of Dr. Michael S. Teitelbaum"
Recordo:
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