2025-10-02
34 分钟The United States is a nation of immigrants,
and that seems to be something President Trump wants to change.
But many argue immigration is key to the country's economic success,
attracting the best and brightest from around the world.
In fact,
typically the large majority of immigration in any given year is people coming over for work and study,
and this, after all, is the part of immigration governments have full control over.
So what does the optimal skilled immigration landscape look like?
And how does that differ from the reality of what we've been seeing in the US and the UK?
Well, my guest today has quite a few ideas.
Hello and welcome to The Economics Show from The Financial Times.
I'm John Byrne Murdoch, the FT's chief data reporter and columnist.
And in this episode, I'm joined by Dr Adam Ozimac from the Economic Innovation Group.
Adam, his chief economist at the EIG, and earlier this year, he co-authored the paper,
Exceptional by Design, a report on high-skilled immigration in the US.
Thanks for joining us, Adam.
Thank you for having me.
Now, I want to start with this thing we always do on the economics show,
where we ask our guests to rate something on a scale of 1 to 10.
So as a friendly starter question, how is the US government handling immigration,