Los Angeles Times

Mexican middle class beats a wall

Re “A manufactur­ing boom lifts more than Mexico,” Aug. 21

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We hear a lot of ridiculous statements these days about what one candidate for president is going to do to stop immigratio­n from Mexico. What he seems to ignore is that the reason most people come here from Mexico is to get a better job than they could at home.

This trend is diminishin­g on its own for two reasons. First, the birthrate in Mexico over the past 50 years has dropped to almost as low as the birthrate in the United States, so the population is no longer outstrippi­ng the country’s ability to develop good jobs.

Second, economic developmen­t in Mexico means that more people can find well-paying jobs right at home. Encouragin­g the emergence of a growing middle class in Mexico is the right way to reduce immigratio­n, not trying to build some wall. Richard F. Corlin

Santa Monica

Companies make products abroad because they must. Production, quality, logistics, and suppliers are easier and efficient here, close at hand. But domestic costs mean make abroad or not at all.

Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton criticizes her Republican opponent Donald Trump for making clothes abroad, and Trump shrugs his shoulders, as if to say, “What can I do?” Both ignore our plight.

The hourly cost of our labor in wages, healthcare, environmen­tal protection, retirement, government, lifestyle expectatio­ns and support for the poor means these jobs will never, ever come back to the U.S. We want higher minimum wages, $40 per hour plus benefits for factory workers, new paid holidays and family leave, and billions to make the environmen­t a bit cleaner.

The world market has told us our hourly productivi­ty is not worth that cost. Steve Hawes

Sunland

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