Neville's Breakfast
Well-known member
The increase in supply also increases demand. If the economy is growing so will wages. When the economy was contracting wages fell. We're on the up again. I know it is counter-intuitive.
EU migration — the effects on UK jobs and wages
"There is little evidence that more migrants push wages down or unemployment up. Economists from the Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics say that when they look at the areas with the largest increase in EU immigration, these have not seen the sharpest falls in employment or wages since 2008.
Jonathan Wadsworth, one of the authors of the CEP report and a former member of the government’s Migration Advisory Committee, says: “There is still no evidence of an overall negative impact of immigration on jobs, [or] wages.”"
https://next.ft.com/content/0deacb52-178b-11e6-9d98-00386a18e39d
The problem with this is that when the economy is growing the benefits of this are enjoyed by the owners of capital as there is little incentive to increase wages because of the ever increasing supply of qualified workers. Inequality rises again. The economic process you describe can only work in an economy that is shielded from excess immigration which would give the opportunity for labour skills to become more scarce and thereby raise their prices (wages).
As to the Centre for Economic Performance and their figures, while I have the greatest respect for their input you simply cannot take the conclusions of economists at face value unless you dissect their assumptions. Research is funded and therefore often has an in- built bias. This Centre may be producing good quality work but as neither of us are academics we are not in a position to judge so selective quotation from sources that suit either side does not really advance the friendly discussion we are having amongst ourselves.