On this episode of the IEA Podcast, host Matthew Lesh and guest Harrison Griffiths of the Institute of Economic Affairs analyze a recent report claiming high immigration levels have burdened Britain's economy, public services and social cohesion rather than boosting growth as promised.
Harrison rebuts arguments that immigrants deter capital investment or drain public finances, instead attributing those trends to flawed government policies. They also discuss balancing public anti-immigration sentiments against labor demands, potential shifts towards only admitting high-skilled immigrants, and how the small boats issue has toxified the immigration debate, though Harrison notes valid cultural integration concerns exist alongside the economic considerations.
Nanny State vs Consumer Choice | #ThinkTent23
Is Wildlife Trade Sustainable? | IEA Podcast
The Future of Rail | ThinkTent 23
Privatisation: What Worked?
Are We Finally Going to Solve the Housing Crisis? | IEA Podcast
How to Revive Liberalism in an Age of Conformity | Parallax Views with Lord Frost
Is the British state broken? | IEA Podcast
Why Is Britain’s Infrastructure So Expensive? | IEA Podcast
The Bank of England is to blame for inflation, says Sir John Redwood
Naked Feminism? | Breaking Barriers
What’s Wrong With Digital Markets Regulation? | IEA Podcast
How Statism Corrupted The Left | Moral Sentiments
Can European Free Movement Survive? | IEA Podcast
Sweden: Road to Socialism... and back?
The Truth About The Gender Pay Gap | Breaking Barriers
Bangers and Cash: Cutting red tape to put Britain at the centre of the cultivated meat revolution, by Matthew Lesh
How Governments Oppress Women | Breaking Barriers
Is China In Jeopardy? | IEA Podcast
The Rise of Right Wing Authoritarianism | Moral Sentiments
How do we tackle crime? | IEA Podcast
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free