I don't care where the labor comes from or where the laborer does his work. I don't care about his citizenship. That is a matter of a simple accident of birth. It is, in a word, irrelevant.
And why should it be relevant? The entire point of international trade, whether in goods or labor, is to benefit from comparative advantage. Remember the England can produce wool with so many units of labor and wine with so many units of labor; Portugal does the same with different numbers, etc. If we let Portugal produce all the win and England produce all the wool, we all get more wool and more wine from ECON 1301? Remember comparative advantage? It works in labor markets, too.
Frankly, the entire concept of nationhood is becoming mostly irrelevant in the 21st century. International borders are largely irrelevant and too weak to keep out something as powerful as the laws of economics no matter what laws you pass.
If a Brit (or an Indian) can lawyer in the U.S. more effectively or efficiently than an American, why shouldn't he. He will lower you bill for legal services, force me to lower my rates, or force me to get more efficient. If I can represent a British client more effectively than a barrister over there, what difference does my nationality make? Right now, we're seeing lots of radiology work being farmed out to Indian docs. They are well trained, the films are zapped around the world on the internet, and they work for less. Are you really going to shed a tear for some U.S. radiologist because he wants to make $350k instead of $150k like the guy in India so long as they both read your X-ray equally well?
Why do arbitrary national boundaries, or the accident of where the radiologist (or lawyer) is born matter in this case? Why should it?
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Did anyone else feel the vibration, I think the earth has shaken on it axis -- I knew that would happen if I ever agreed with TTH.
I particularly agree with the item I bolded. In fact, the changes in nationhood are just an extension of the same economic forces that have radiologists in India reading film. Nations are becoming just a competing set of laws -- some more or less boneheaded than others.