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The New Builders of the American Economy - Brain Drain Unlimited Foundation Highly skilled immigrants are driving U.S. innovation, patents, and economic growth, but outdated policies are holding them back. This firsthand perspective highlights the data, the urgency, and what needs to change.

Fresh from the blog: Immigrants aren’t just contributing to the U.S. economy—they’re shaping its future. From patents to policy, they’re building what comes next.
📖 Read more: vist.ly/3n8qkjh
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📘 Just in time for your Memorial Day weekend read:
Visa delays. Talent denied.
While we stall, the future is flying elsewhere. ✈️

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#braindrain #TalentFlight #HighSkilledImmigration #VisaBacklog

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Growth effects of high-skilled immigration larger than previously expected: JPM Investing.com -- According to a report from JPMorgan on Friday, the economic benefits of high-skilled immigration are even greater than previously thought. The bank said its analysts found that the positive effects of immigration on long-term economic growth increase significantly when a greater share of immigrants have higher education levels. "The growth effects of high-skilled immigration are larger," said JPMorgan, reinforcing the idea that attracting skilled workers is crucial for economic expansion. Many developed nations are already facing the challenge of shrinking working-age populations, which puts pressure on government budgets and pension systems, said the bank. While cutting entitlements or raising taxes are potential solutions, JPMorgan believes increasing high-skilled immigration is a more effective way to address these fiscal concerns. "As stress grows, raising high-skilled immigration is likely to be seen as an attractive way of reducing that cost," the bank noted. The firm highlighted data from the OECD that shows countries in the Anglosphere—such as the U.S., Canada, the UK, and Australia—have been particularly successful in attracting highly educated immigrants, with more than 40% of their foreign-born populations classified as highly educated. JPMorgan also claimed that "countries with proportionally more highly educated immigrants have also seen higher overall levels of immigration, perhaps as they see the biggest benefits." JPMorgan’s analysis found that a 1% increase in the share of highly educated immigrants results in a 0.04 percentage point boost to GDP growth. This means that a country with 60% highly educated immigrants would see a 1.2 percentage point larger growth effect compared to one where only 30% of immigrants have higher education.

Click Subscribe. #HighSkilledImmigration #EconomicGrowth #JPMorgan #ImmigrationImpact #SkilledWorkers

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