Great countries welcome immigrants
The last fortnight has seen a disgusting display of inhumanity, targeted against foreigners living in South Africa. Whether or not they’re illegal, whether or not they’re fleeing repression in Zimbabwe, whether or not they have jobs, local scum who think they’re superior have attacked anyone who is not like them, in the most brutal fashion. Our streets resemble the worst days of apartheid, and the pogroms continue.
We should be ashamed.
That foreigners flock to South Africa is a compliment. Do we really want the sort of country that isn’t attractive to foreigners? Perhaps one in which the government has to fence people in? After the decades of succour foreign countries gave our liberation leaders, are we returning the favour by slaughtering them like animals?
The problem is deep. Much of it is appears to be simple tribalism, racism and xenophobia, yes. But that’s not the cause. The cause is two-fold: the failure of government to improve the lot of our own people, and a widespread misunderstanding of the economic issues raised by immigration.
Foreigners strengthen a country. Yes, there are criminals among them, who steal out of need or opportunity. But the majority — even the poor, the jobless and the refugees — on balance contribute to an economy over time. They’d have to, or they’d starve. The notion that they “steal jobs” is mistaken. They do take jobs, yes, but every new job created adds more value to the economy than it costs. They contribute to production, and to consumption, and as a result create new jobs in turn.
Many foreigners, both in South Africa and elsewhere in the world, have become successful business people. They’re often entrepreneurs who create companies (and jobs) that locals haven’t created, to supply products or services locals haven’t (or won’t) supply. Obviously, they do compete against South African workers and businesses, but if they do so successfully, one has to ask why every consumer should pay the price for a local’s inefficiency or rapaciousness. Protectionism might help the protected, but it does so at a heavy price to consumers. Is it really fair to expect our people — many of whom are themselves poor — to subsidise inefficiency in the name of nationalism?
The most notable example of success that rests heavily on free immigration is the United States. It grew strong and prosperous on the hard work, the energy, and the entrepreneurism of immigrants. It didn’t let in only “skilled” immigrants. It recognised that free people, working for themselves in free markets, develop skills. That free people create prosperity and an economic vitality that is both deep and wide, and reaches far beyond just the immigrant communities themselves.
We demanded our freedom, and celebrated it when it was won, yet we refuse to grant others the same freedom? Why protest the pass laws, but demand that our borders be closed? Why ignore the biggest benefit of liberty: the ability to prosper without the dead hand of government holding us down?
True, immigration has its problems. Most notably, it’s a problem in welfare states. When taxpayers cough up to support people without the means to support themselves, it stands to reason that they don’t want bums arriving who leech off the system. This is the reason why modern America is no longer as welcoming as it once was, and why European countries have even bigger immigration problems. The problem isn’t immigration, it’s economic policy at home.
The obvious solution is simply not to offer foreigners any welfare beyond what the common decency of a civilised country requires. An even better solution is not to delude ourselves that a welfare state is a good idea in the first place. It sounds nice, but it is counter-productive. Let people invest their capital and spend their money as they see fit. Income is, after all, the incentive to be productive, so letting people keep their income seems smart if productivity and economic growth is what you’re after. Capitalism isn’t what makes people poor. You can’t sell stuff to poor people. What makes people poor is when free economic activity is strangled by state control. When markets are prevented from thriving unencumbered by regulation. When government discourages or even bans individuals from seeking profitable and sustainable ways to offer other people the things they need or want.
Liberation shouldn’t be a halfway measure. If liberation is to mean anything, it should carry both its political and economic meaning. Letting free people engage in free markets is how you create a wealthy, job-creating economy — something our government has singularly failed to do. For all its stated intentions and campaign slogans, it has not created jobs. It has not delivered a better life for all. And that’s not because of an “implementation crisis”. It’s because of a policy crisis. It’s because it cannot deliver a better life for all, even if it wanted to. All a government can deliver is the justice and liberty that permits each of us to pursue our own better life, however we define it.
Our economic growth lags even the global average, let alone the growth of other emerging markets. Our government takes almost a third of our GDP in taxes, yet what have ordinary South Africans received for this sacrifice? Very little indeed. No wonder they’re angry.
But making scapegoats of foreigners is misdirected anger. If the government seems reluctant to say so clearly, it is only because it knows the anger should really be directed at the socialist policies, the bureaucratic incompetence and the crony corruption of the ruling ANC. It deserves a great deal of credit for liberating our people. However, as a government, the ANC has failed the people.
We should recognise that economics, job creation and prosperity is not a zero-sum game. Every participant in our economy on average produces more than he consumes. Therefore, we should welcome every participant in our economy, because their work makes all of us more prosperous. Their work delivers the services and goods that make all of us better off. A government can’t make a better life for all, but people can. Where they’re from is immaterial.
Our government has not only failed the people, but it has failed even to speak up against the oppression on our doorstep. The result? Many of the victims of Zimbabwe’s tyrant now need the safety of our country, as many of our own people once needed the safety of theirs. We should take them in. We owe it to them.
Taking our anger at government failures out on foreigners is misguided and counter-productive. It not only hurts our own prosperity and progress, but how is it different from the white redneck who went and shot hisself some kaffirs in Skielik? Or the scum that degraded black staff at their university? Do we all want to be like that? How can we condemn those acts, or blame people for calling us racists and violent third-world savages, when all they see on TV is racism and violent third-world savagery?
We, of all people, should welcome immigrants. We should thank them for thinking our country worth making a new life in. We are the rainbow nation. Or aren’t we?
PS. Tomorrow, Saturday 24 May, a march will be held in Johannesburg to protest the rising xenophobia in South Africa. Despite the participation of many confused socialists who misunderstand the economics of free immigration but instinctively realise this wave of violence is evil, this march is worth supporting. I will be there, marching for the first time since the liberation of South Africa. Join us. Meet at Marks Park, on Empire Road, near Hillbrow, at 9 am. From there, we’ll head to the Library Gardens, via the Department of Home Affairs.















For immigrants to add value, certain conditions have to be met. The recipient country firstly has to be rich. So rich, in fact, that its citizens do not deign to do low-paid jobs.
Secondly a shortage of low-paid labour must exist. This is why Mexicans add economic value to the US. Americans don’t want to pick fruit in California. This is most however emphatically not the case in SA, where there is an enormous oversupply of unskilled labour.
Thirdly, if we’re talking job creation, we’re talking about highly skilled immigrants. This is why it’s tough to get into the UK - you need a degree, work experience etc. While there are some skilled Zimbabweans, the overwhelming majority of immigrants are poor, unskilled and hopeless. These people will not create jobs but they will consume services and housing.
To therefore compare the benefits immigration provides to South Africa and first-world countries is not quite valid, is it?
Wrong on all counts, I’m afraid. I was comparing South Africa to other developing countries, notably the US, whose 19th century immigration boom involved hordes of poor, unskilled workers, when it was still poor and unindustrialised itself.
It is historical blindness — not to mention arrogant and condescending — to think people without degrees can’t make an honest living, start a business, or care for themselves and their families. On the contrary, such people are apt to work harder, because they don’t suffer from the sense of superiority and entitlement so common among the supposed elite.
As for their consuming services and housing, unless you have a welfare state problem, they can only do so if they pay for it, which means they’ve already added value to our economy. The problems modern first world countries have with immigration is not caused by immigration. It’s caused by bloated, sluggish welfare economies, and by failure of social integration due in large part to misguided economic xenophobia.
You express it in comments on blogs. Others express it rather more barbarically. Words may be more palatable than violence, but it’s the exact same misconception that underlies both.
No, it is you that is totally wrong, I am afraid. You seem to struggle with very basic comprehension.
For example, I did not say people need a degree to add value. I said you need a degree to get into the UK. Not QUITE the same, is it? You are the arrogant and condescending little prick here by jumping on your high and mighty little liberal horse.
Furthermore, you are disputing things that I never said. Where did I ascribe first-world problems to immigration?
Your comparison to 19th century America is also dead wrong. America was a largely empty country and needed the labour. SA is anything but empty and once again does not need the labour - we have a vast oversupply of unskilled labour. Furthermore, even 19th century America was not a poor country. It was in the process of becoming very rich.
All in all, an extremely ill-considered and amateurish response on your behalf. Your analysis is poor, your conclusions flawed and generally this piece is a piece of PC bullshit.
PS: Do not worry - this is the last response I shall post on your blog. Your supercilious, arrogant attitude to a contributor who wrote something that was in no way, shape or form a personal attack on you, but rather a response to your opinion, was totally uncalled for.
Fine by me. I’ll let readers make up their own mind about what you did and didn’t say, and whether I responded accurately. Because I clearly heard you make a general case that immigrants don’t add value unless the recipient country is very rich, there’s a shortage of low-paid labour, and/or the immigrants are highly skilled.
If you can’t be a guest on a blog and disagree without swearing at your host, I’m not surprised you feel a psychological need to look down on immigrants. Most racism and discrimination starts that way.
dude!
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2154/2521301179_7e9c7c5395.jpg?v=0
tsk
We should be ashamed at our government. People are underestimating the townships.
http://mhambi.blogspot.com/2008/05/rainbow-racists-are-rational-and-not.html
PS: I have to agree with Anton. This is exactly an example of what happens when you have no state, which it seems is what Ivo the ideologue wants.
Ivo, you are an imperialist puppet, the organ-grinding monkey of Thabo Mbeki whose quiet renaissance attempts to feed the dishonest intentions of traitors who deserted me in my hour of need. Send them back to me! Bring my children back home. You only wish to steal them from me so that they can contribute to your economy instead of my own.
How do you suppose I am to finance a new fleet of Tiger Moths to invade Harrods?
Save your fascist rhetoric for the degreed emigrants who seek asylum in Britain from that sinister Thabo whose bacon I saved during The Struggle.
South Africa would not be free had it not been for my philanthropic actions. Ordinary South Africans would not be free to remind my children that they should return to my bosom had it not been for my nurturing ways before 1994.
Let them remind my children. If your child would run amok in a former friend’s home, steal his money, take his daughter, and swipe the food from the mouths of his sons, would you not spank his wayward bottom?
Please, Ivo, save your post-neo-post-colonial chitter chatter for the pre-neo-post colonial degreed filth who flee back to rich Britain and its criminal commonly wealthy allies and don’t let my children read this!
I’m sorry, Bob, but I must protest: organ-grinding is a perfectly honourable way for a free man to earn a living. Besides, from an ideologue and a little p****, what more do you expect?
I see you’re above such petty politics about immigration, liberty, and the value of a human life, however. You have the right idea. Nevermind welfare, promise them land! Keep this up, and you’ll surely beat that yellow running dog in the run-off.
@ dionysusstoned: Heh, yup, that be me.
Ivo, why did you not include ‘Free violence’ on your poster?
Hehe. There were a lot of other free things in the slogan at first, but it turned out bigger posters weren’t free.
hey bitches what the hell is this immigrant poster. what do you think we are? well were the one who work the dam fields for you you should at least apprreciate that. think this over before you post alright.