The majority are fleeing violence not just poverty, andin the long run will benefit economies.
I looked further at your link advocating for the economic benefit of refugees
While it shares relevant information, the case it makes is not universally compelling or applicable.
I concur that a manageable number of refugees can be absorbed and they can prosper and be great contributors.
BUT THE NUMBER DOES MATTER The influx from vietnam etal in the late 70’s was a drop in the bucket compared to number of migrantes we are seeing in the US and Europe today. Europe has done well with refugees in the past, but the numbers were significantly less than are now arriving seeking status. They had plans for 160k across 2 dozen countries while Germany alone had 800k applications (your article). The first is manageable while the second is a flood.
The number of refugees the US can readily sustain is also impacted by illegal immigrants arriving and competing for public services and low skilled entry work. We have seen dramatic increases in illegal migration in recent decades. I would greatly prefer we focused on accepting legal refugees over illegal migrants. I think large numbers of economic migrants can displace our financial and heart room for legit refugees. As we could see in the last election, when there is pushback on immigrants, it is often expressed as a general sentiment and not just targeted to illegal migrants.
The Danish study is interesting but just correlation at best. I think it’s far more likely they chose settlement areas for their refugees that were growing and could readily sustain the influx. Isn’t that what you would do if you were placing refugees? I certainly wouldn’t send them to Detroit and hope for the best, I’d target communities that are thriving economically. When you place them in thriving communities, the data would be expected to show increasing wages over time, this is not proof the refugees were the cause rather than just along for the ride (correlation =/= causation).
Again, the issue is not whether we should accept immigrants (we should), the issue is how many and whether we should target legit refugees over low skilled economic migrants.
I work part time with ‘at risk’ Foster kids and have worked with parolees attempting to reintegrate after their time behind bars. These are the people who are lowest in desirability by employers but have the greatest need for employment. I want a tight labor market for entry work, so they can become productive contributors. It’s only with the recent tight labor market of the last couple years that we are finally seeing significant drops in black unemployment, especially among black teens.