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Game Theory and Immigration: How Economics Actually Works Behind Policy Decisions

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
What if the immigration debate isn't really about being nice or mean, but about understanding which economic patterns actually work? In this episode, Adrian Walsh breaks down how game theory reveals the hidden economics behind immigration policy - and why the smartest countries are treating it like a strategic game, not an emotional argument. On Pattern Break, we explore why Asian students consistently outscore others by 50-100 points on international tests, how Canada's points-based system brings in immigrants earning 20% more than the national average, and what countries like Singapore and the UAE know that others don't. You'll discover why first-generation Asian immigrants in the US start companies at nearly double the rate of other groups, learn how the highest immigration countries also have some of the highest GDP per capita, and understand why treating immigration like a zero-sum game might be the biggest economic mistake countries make. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Introduction with Adrian Walsh [01:30] The immigration numbers that don't lie [04:00] Canada's points system vs. US lottery approach [07:00] Why Singapore treats immigration like recruiting [10:00] Game theory and the cooperation trap [12:00] What smart policy actually looks like 🔍 Topics: game theory, immigration economics, points-based immigration, economic policy, Canada immigration system, Singapore immigration ⭐ Ready for more economics that actually makes sense? Follow Pattern Break for daily episodes that break down the patterns behind how the world really works. Drop us a 5-star review if this episode got you thinking - it helps other curious minds find us. See you tomorrow for another pattern worth knowing!

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------ Keywords: political psychology, war strategy, historical trends, strategic thinking, psychology history, historical cycles, behavior analysis

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