George J. Borjas is the Robert W. Scrivner Professor of Economics and Social Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. He is the recipient of the 2011 IZA Prize in Labor Economics.
We Wanted Workers is essential to understanding America's future. Drawing on decades of research, George Borjas cuts through the myths and obfuscations plaguing our immigration debate. Why are some immigrants flourishing while others are struggling to make ends meet? What are the differences between free trade in goods and services and the free movement of people across borders? Rather than praise immigrants as saints or damn them as sinners, Borjas gives his readers the tools they need to understand these and other questions. This is the most lucid, powerful work of social science I've ever read. -- Reihan Salam, executive editor, National Review We Wanted Workers is an invaluable addition to the literature on U.S. immigration policy. A model of lucid exposition, it delves deeply into the subtle complexities of a subject that has been rife with sloppy and wishful thinking. Borjas reviews a mountain of evidence in support of a forceful argument for the position that, while there are benefits, one needs also to be mindful of the considerable costs associated with the liberalization of immigration policies. -- Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stolz Professor of the Social Sciences, Brown University Borjas, the world's leading economic expert on immigration, has penned a non-technical, nearly conversational book pointing out all the issues in immigration's effects on an economy-particularly the American economy. The central message is 'it depends'-impacts are positive or negative for different natives, different kinds of immigrants, and at different times. With immigration again a central political issue, this book is must-reading for every voter. -- Daniel Hamermesh, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) and Royal Holloway University of London