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  1. #1

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    Immigration Trims Prices?

    Immigration trims prices?
    By SHANKAR VEDANTAM
    THE WASHINGTON POST
    last updated: October 16, 2007 06:07:03 AM

    Last week, a gallon of gas at an Exxon station in the tony Washington suburb of Bethesda, Md., cost $2.99.

    At an Exxon station in the less affluent nearby suburb of Wheaton, a gallon cost $2.63, 36 cents less.

    Both Exxon stations are near a subway line that goes to Washington. Both are in Montgomery County.

    Why would the same company charge you 14 percent more for an identical product in one location? Because it can.

    That's the simple answer. If you are willing to pay extra for the convenience of filling up your car at an expensive station on your way to work, rather than the cheaper one that is a little out of your way, Exxon is more than willing to let you. But there is a more interesting answer: The difference in gas prices may have to do with the fact that Wheaton has many more immigrants who are not fully assimilated into the economy than does Bethesda.

    Immigration, economist Saul Lach recently found, plays a powerful role in holding down prices. For every 1 percent increase in the ratio of immigrants to natives, prices go down by about 0.5 percent, according to Lach's study about the effects of 200,000 Jews immigrating to Israel from the former Soviet Union in 1990.

    Aviv Nevo, an economist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., said immigrants to the United States, and price-conscious consumers in general, have the same effect: "The broad principle is immigrants change the mix of consumers and will likely change the relative prices of different products."

    Lower the price to raise sales

    Although sudden increases in immigration could drive up the cost of housing and retail items where production cannot be ramped up quickly, Nevo said merchants quickly realize there is more profit to be made by decreasing prices on everyday items: "You decrease the price by 10 percent but increase the amount you sell by 200 percent."

    Lach's research has particular resonance given the debate over immigration that has recently roiled the nation. Arguments about immigration often revolve around cost. Poor and recent immigrants are said to crowd schools and stretch public services.

    The debate is intense in Stanislaus County where, according to the American Community Survey of 2006, there are slightly more than 100,000 people born outside the United States, about a fifth of the population.

    If Lach's thesis is correct, successful measures to keep immigrants out of communities might have the opposite effect than the one desired -- prices on everything from diapers to dairy items might go up.

    Instead of paying more money for social services, residents could pay more money to Exxon.

    Lach's thesis, that immigration acts as a brake on inflation, is unusual in that it explores the effect immigrants have on the demand side of an economy, and not just as workers who lower the costs of child care, for example, by increasing the labor pool.

    Lach said in a paper published in the Journal of Political Economy that immigrants tend to do what Bethesda drivers do not do often enough: They go the extra mile to the cheaper gas station. Lach found that new immigrants spend much more time comparison shopping than natives. Perhaps because their economic circumstances force them to look for the best deals, or because they have more discretionary time to compare prices, or because they have not developed brand loyalties.

    Forcing market efficiency

    Whatever the reason, they seem to force markets to run more efficiently, and thereby make cheaper prices available for all.

    Lach's study was based on an analysis of 915 products at 1,837 retail stores in 52 cities after the abrupt influx of 200,000 immigrants to Israel from countries in the former Soviet Union. The economist, who works at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, collected 199,425 price quotes.

    "Immigrants are more sensitive to prices and also are more inclined to search for lower prices," Lach said in an e-mail. "This prompts stores not to increase their prices as often or as steeply ... or even to lower their prices in order to capture as many immigrant customers as possible. The population at large should benefit from this downward pressure on prices because stores cannot discriminate between natives and immigrants."

    Joshua Angrist, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said Lach's paper is interesting but that research also shows the poor sometimes pay more for things because retailers tend to avoid setting up shop in poor neighborhoods. Wealthy people also have more financial leverage for expensive purchases.

    The downward effect on prices that Lach found was most evident for everyday items. Ironically, what the research suggests is that poor, new immigrants, the folks who trigger the most concern among immigration opponents, might impose the strongest brake on prices because they are hungriest for good deals. Once settled, immigrants apparently join the ranks of people who pay $2.99 for a gallon of gas that elsewhere costs $2.63.


    http://www.modbee.com/local/v-print/story/94424.html

  2. #2
    cousinsal's Avatar
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    Yeah, sure - and it more than makes up for all the social services we give them?!! NOT.

    In the end, the American citizen loses. And, did you notice they keep saying "immigrants" as if there are not some who are ILLEGAL, who are the ones getting paid the least in order for our prices to go down? If someone is legal, they are supposedly making as much as an American citizen would. However because they are illegal, they are taking American jobs and depressing wages.

    They always forget the other side of the story.

  3. #3
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    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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