> It is not a natural-resource ownership allocation problem like you allude to with Norway.
This is false in the general sense but also you can just ignore the natural resource ownership allocation problem and still use Norway as an example, or a different country (the Netherlands? New Zealand? Japan?).
The answer someone has to provide is why an everyday American barista can't wake up and move to Switzerland, Norway, etc.
> Trapping the American laborer in America to earn their wage, when they could go elsewhere, is like making a farmer farm in the desert.
Japan is notoriously xenophobic with regards to matters of immigration. Many analysts speculate that this attitude will cost them dearly as their demographic trends continue and the population ages, or expect attitudes to change. The same is true for much of East Asia. Some recent coverage from within the past week: https://www.economist.com/leaders/2023/07/06/the-new-asian-f...
We don’t need to be stuck in a rut of malaise like Japan. We could prosper instead.
This is false in the general sense but also you can just ignore the natural resource ownership allocation problem and still use Norway as an example, or a different country (the Netherlands? New Zealand? Japan?).
The answer someone has to provide is why an everyday American barista can't wake up and move to Switzerland, Norway, etc.
> Trapping the American laborer in America to earn their wage, when they could go elsewhere, is like making a farmer farm in the desert.