>“Social democracies like Norway only work because they’re ethnically homogeneous and swimming in oil money”
>Small island nation of Mauritius has highest standard of living in Africa
>No natural resources
>68% Indo-Mauritian, 27% Creole, 5% other
>(Religion also split between Hindu, Catholic, and Muslim)
>Leftist parties make up vast majority of parliament
>Free healthcare and education, including college
>Right-wing Heritage Foundation still lists their economy as 15th “freest” in the world
>Ranked more democratic than the United States by the Economist Intelligence Unit
>mfw

The family planning programs’ success was due to support from the government and eventually the traditionally pronatalist religious communities, which both recognized that controlling population growth was necessary because of Mauritius’ small size and limited resources.
Tight feedback loop, effects of policies more immediately obvious because there is no where to go, and percent control of the polity per person is higher.
Downturns in the sugar and textile industries in the mid-2000s and a lack of highly qualified domestic workers for Mauritius’ growing services sector led to the emigration of low-skilled workers and a reliance on skilled foreign labor.
Hmn, I wonder what impact that might have.
Since 2007, Mauritius has pursued a circular migration program to enable citizens to acquire new skills and savings abroad and then return home to start businesses and to invest in the country’s development.
This is Nationalist. An Internationalist program would involve them leaving the island permanently.
Net migration rate: 0 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2016 est.)
Huh. Doesn’t sound like mass migration to me.
Of course, many of the objections to the United States becoming Singapore are based on things like its size, relative concentration of population, and so on. …criticisms which could also apply to Mauritius.
So, OP, do you agree that the United States could become Singapore?
It seems what we have here is not an argument for Open Borders Neoliberal World™, but rather, an argument for small countries which have tight political feedback loops between policy and its effects, and high percentage of political control per person. (Something I have been considering myself.) This means people have to live with the consequences of their political decisions and have the ability to do something about it.
ETA: The real question here is, can we find one of these that’s big? Japan (127M) and Korea (50M) both fare reasonably well despite being over ten times the size of Norway (5M) and for Japan, about 100x the size of Mauritius (1.3M). …but they’re those evil ethnically homogenous type nations we’re all supposed to hate.
Your ability to constantly dance around what is being talked about and then randomly conclude that All Of Your Beliefs Are Correct continues to impress
So you aren’t in favor of mass migration? Is not “mass migration is actually Good” the entire point of such rhetoric? Otherwise, there is little reason to worry about cultural replacement.
And hey, maybe you’re a full-blooded Communist and not a Neoliberal. That also works on a sufficiently small scale. Or maybe you’re a Libertarian. It doesn’t make that much difference in this case.

