Sweden’s ugly immigration problem
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opini...ticle26338254/
  Margaret Wente 
  The Globe and Mail
  Published Friday, Sep. 11, 2015 5:00PM EDT 
 Last updated Friday, Sep. 11, 2015 5:36PM EDT 
 
 
 In Europe, refugees from Syria and Iraq have been cramming the  ferry-trains heading from Germany to Denmark. But once in Denmark, many  refused to get off. Where they really want to go is Sweden, where  refugee policies are more generous. When the Danes said no, they hopped  off the trains, and began 
heading toward the Swedish border by taxi, bus, and foot.
  Sweden has the most welcoming asylum policies and most generous  welfare programs in the European Union. One typical refugee, Natanael  Haile, barely escaped drowning in the Mediterranean in 2013. But the  folks back home in Eritrea don’t want to know about the perils of his  journey. As he told 
The New York Times,  they want to know about “his secondhand car, the government allowances  he receives and his plans to find work as a welder once he finishes a  two year language course.” As a registered refugee, he receives a  monthly living allowance of more than $700 (U.S.).
Sweden’s  generous immigration policies are essential to the image of a country  that (like Canada) prides itself as a moral superpower. For the past 40  years, most of Sweden’s immigration has involved refugees and family  reunification, so much so that the words “immigrant” and “refugee” are  synonymous there (unlike in Canada).
Sweden takes in more refugees  per capita than any other European country, and immigrants – mainly  from the Middle East and Africa – now make up about 16 per cent of the  population. The main political parties, as well as the mainstream media,  support the status quo. Questioning the consensus is regarded as  xenophobic and hateful. Now all of Europe is being urged to be as  generous as Sweden.
So how are things working out in the most immigration-friendly country on the planet?
Not  so well, says Tino Sanandaji. Mr. Sanandaji is himself an immigrant, a  Kurdish-Swedish economist who was born in Iran and moved to Sweden when  he was 10. He has a doctorate in economics from the University of  Chicago and specializes in immigration issues. This week I spoke with  him by Skype.
“There has been a lack of integration among  non-European refugees,” he told me. Forty-eight per cent of immigrants  of working age don’t work, he said. Even after 15 years in Sweden, their  employment rates reach only about 60 per cent. Sweden has the biggest  employment gap in Europe between natives and non-natives.
In  Sweden, where equality is revered, inequality is now entrenched.  Forty-two per cent of the long-term unemployed are immigrants, Mr.  Sanandaji said. Fifty-eight per cent of welfare payments go to  immigrants. Forty-five per cent of children with low test scores are  immigrants. Immigrants on average earn less than 40 per cent of Swedes.  The majority of people charged with murder, rape and robbery are either  first- or second-generation immigrants. “Since the 1980s, Sweden has had  the largest increase in inequality of any country in the OECD,” Mr.  Sanandaji said.
It’s not for lack of trying. Sweden is tops in  Europe for its immigration efforts. Nor is it the newcomers’ fault.  Sweden’s labour market is highly skills-intensive, and even low-skilled  Swedes can’t get work. “So what chance is there for a 40-year-old woman  from Africa?” Mr. Sandaji wondered.
Sweden’s fantasy is that if  you socialize the children of immigrants and refugees correctly, they’ll  grow up to be just like native Swedes. But it hasn’t worked out that  way. Much of the second generation lives in nice Swedish welfare  ghettos. The social strains – white flight, a general decline in trust –  are growing worse. The immigrant-heavy city of 
Malmo, just across the bridge from Denmark, is an economic and social basket case.
Sweden’s  generosity costs a fortune, at a time when economic growth is stagnant.  The country now spends about $4-billion a year on settling new refugees  – up from $1-billion a few years ago, Mr. Sanandaji said. And they keep  coming. Sweden automatically accepts unaccompanied minors. “We used to  take in 500 unaccompanied minors a year,” he said. “This year we are  expecting 12,000.”
Yet Sweden’s acute immigration problems  scarcely feature in the mainstream media. Journalists see their mission  as stopping racism, so they don’t report the bad news. Despite – or  perhaps because of – this self-censorship, the gap between the opinion  elites and the voters on immigration issues is now a chasm. According to  a recent opinion poll, 58 per cent of Swedes believe there is too much  immigration, Mr. Sanandaji noted. The anti-immigration 
Sweden Democrats party is now polling at between 20 per cent and 25 per cent.
Sweden  is a cautionary tale for anyone who believes that Europe is capable of  assimilating the hundreds of thousands of refugees and migrants who are  besieging the continent, or the millions more who are desperately poised  to follow in their wake. The argument that these people are vital to  boost the economy – that they will magically create economic growth and  bail the Europeans out of their demographic decline – is a fantasy.
It’s  really very simple, Mr. Sanandaji explained. You can’t combine open  borders with a welfare state. “If you’re offering generous welfare  benefits to every citizen, and anyone can come and use these benefits,  then a very large number of people will try to do that. And it’s just  mathematically impossible for a small country like Sweden to fund those  benefits.”
Things will get worse before they get better. As Judy Dempsey, a senior analyst at a Berlin think tank, told 
The Wall Street Journal, “Europe hasn’t seen anything yet in terms of the numbers or the backlash.”
Meanwhile, Sweden’s neighbour, Denmark, has cut the benefits for refugees in half, and has 
taken out ads  in Lebanese newspapers warning would-be migrants to stay home. The  Danes don’t want to be a moral superpower. They can’t afford it.
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this article is actually out of date given it was written in September 2015, before the most recent wave of issues in Sweden and Europe in general.
let's repeat one critical sentence from this article .. 
It’s  really very simple, Mr. Sanandaji explained. You can’t combine open  borders with a welfare state.
got that libtard bitches??