IPES 2012 RAISE OR RESIST? Explaining Barriers to Temporary Migration during the Global Recession DAVID T. HSU

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Transcription:

IPES 2012 RAISE OR RESIST? Explaining Barriers to Temporary Migration during the Global Recession DAVID T. HSU Browne Center for International Politics University of Pennsylvania

QUESTION What explains variation in government barriers to migration during period of global recession?

MIGRATION POLICY IN HARD TIMES Backlash Backlash as conventional wisdom: Rising unemployment. More negative sentiment. Growing demands for closure. Why revisit? Temporary migration. Skilled migration. Period of flux.

THE CORE TENSION Increased pressures to restrict migration, yet powerful industries may depend on it. Too many Americans can't find jobs, yet too many companies can't fill open positions. Brad Smith, Microsoft EVP & General Counsel, Oct. 2012

EXAMPLE SPAIN 2008 Paid return program. 2009 Broad contigente moratorium; 90% quota cut on non-farm. 2010 Exempt certain skilled occupations from labor market test. 2011 Expand fast-track eligibility, certain skilled occupations.

LABOR MIGRATION UNDER PRESSURE PBS toward Quota? Quota toward PBS? Y N Y N Australia Canada Japan US UK New Zealand Russia Korea

BUILDING ON PREVIOUS WORK Immigration policy and past crises. (Pope & Withers 1993; Goldin 1994; Freeman 1995; Timmer & Williamson 1998; Hatton & Williamson 2009; Green & Winters 2010; Medina 2011; Peters 2011) Individuals & firms: Sorting on skill. (O Rourke & Sinnott 2006; Hanson, Scheve & Slaughter 2007; Hainsmueller & Hiscox 2010; Facchini, Mayda & Mishra 2010) Disaggregate policy pressures/responses.

ARGUMENT POPULAR BACKLASH: More severe downturn, broader-based negative sentiment Leaders face greater pressure to raise transparent, encompassing barriers (eg. broad quotas cuts, locals first). CLIENT POLITICS: Influential industries highly dependent on foreign labor Leaders face greater pressure to resist barriers that ll hurt business (eg. defend, expand skill-biased provisions). Skilled migration should be easier to defend in hard times. Leaders facing both should be able to craft hybrid responses.

EXPECTATIONS Quantity: How extensive were quota cuts, general prohibitions? Quality: How extensive were skill-biased provisions? Independent Variable Quantity Quality Unemployment + Prior growth in migrant stock + Labor strength + + Business strength + Education + Right-leaning party??

RESEARCH DESIGN Dataset: Scores based on 118 official policy announcements related to temporary migration 2008-2011 across 34 countries. Category Action 1. Moratorium: On issuance of all work visas. On issuance of work visas in specific sectors. On renewal of all work visas. On renewal of work visas in specific sectors. 2. Quotas: Reduced for all work visas. Reduced for work visas in specific sectors. 3. Migrant standards: Increase education level requirements. Increase income level requirements. Increase language requirements. 4. Employer measures: Search and hiring requirements. Wage restrictions targeting foreign workers. Increased fees for employers of foreign workers. Occupational lists modified. 5. Migrants in country: Foreign worker return program.

Quantity How extensive were quota cuts, general barriers? 8 6 4 2 Mean Quantity Score, 2008-2011 Australia Russia France India Korea United Kingdom Portugal Italy Spain Ireland 0

Quality How extensive were skill-biased provisions? 8 6 4 2 Mean Quality Score, 2008-2011 Germany Ireland Sweden Switzerland United Kingdom Belgium Canada New Zealand Singapore Australia 0

GOVERNMENT RESPONSES Extensive Skill-bias Limited Skill-bias Extensive Quotas U.K. Spain Limited Quotas Canada *U.S

MODEL Dependent Variable: Barriers Score (Quantity & Quality). Explanatory Variables: Labor Strength (Trade Union Density) Business Strength (FDI / GDP) Government (Right-leaning Party) Labor Markets (Unemployment Rate) Past Immigration ( Migrant Stock) Demographics ( 65 Population Ratio) Education (Tertiary Ed. Ratio) Control Variables: Wealth (GDP per capita) Land (Square kilometers) Tradition (Settler countries) Unit of Analysis: Country-year (N=136)

Quantity (Quotas) Quality (Skill-bias) Labor Strength 0.013 [0.019] 0.030** [0.015] Business Strength - 0.014* [0.007] 0.012*** [0.003] Right Party - 0.426 [0.724] - 0.992*** [0.386] Unemployment 0.205*** [0.083] - 0.064** [0.027] Migrant Stock 0.015** [0.007] - 0.007*** [0.003] Aging Population - 0.004 [0.022] 0.037 [0.052] Education - 0.008 [0.034] 0.064*** [0.018] Income 0.117 [0.106] 0.192 [0.195] Land - 0.279** [0.111] - 0.043 [0.065] Settler - 0.682** [0.331] 0.969*** [0.298] Observations 136 136 R-squared 0.30 0.37 OLS, Year Dummies Significance levels *** p< 0.01, **p<0.05, *p<0.10.

FINDINGS QUOTAS Less More Higher Business Strength Higher Unemployment More Land Higher Migrant Growth SKILL-BIASED Less More Higher Unemployment Higher Business, Labor Higher Migrant Growth Higher Education

8 Predicted Quantity Score 8 Predicted Quality Score 6 6 4 4 2 2 0 0 4 8 12 16 20 Unemployment 4 8 12 16 20 Unemployment 8 Predicted Quality Score 8 Predicted Quality Score 6 6 4 4 2 2 0 0 0 50 100 150 200 FDI/GDP 5 10 15 20 25 30 Higher Education Ratio

CONCLUSION Account for both popular backlash against migration and firms continued dependence on foreign workers. Disaggregating policy response to recession shows: Greater reliance on quotas & general prohibitions closely tied to overall economic conditions, negative sentiment; less when industry dependence on foreign workers is high. Skill-biased provisions generous when conflicting pressures, educated. Striking fluidity of Quota/PBS regimes in recent crisis. Transparency v. obfuscation; expand historical scope.

APPENDIX

VARIABLES & DATA SOURCES Variable Description Source ctyname Name of country Not applicable ctycode Number assigned to country Not applicable year Year Not applicable quantity Score for restrictions on quantity of labor migration Author quality Score for restrictions on quality of labor migration Author unemployment Unemployment, total (% of total labor force) IMF oldpopulation Population ages 65 and above (% of total) World Bank population Population World Bank land Land area (sq. km) World Bank tertiary Tertiary education attained (% of total pop. over 25) Barro & Lee (2011) migstockchange Change in int l migrant stock (% of population), 5 years UNESA income GDP per capita (constant 2000 US$) World Bank gdp GDP (constant 2000 US$) World Bank fdi Inward foreign direct investment stock (% of GDP) UNCTAD exports Exports of goods and services (% of GDP) WB/WTO right Largest party in government is "right" or "Center-right" DPI/Author pbs "1" if country has a Points-Based immigration system Author settler "1" if country is historically a settler country Author braindrain Emigration rate in 2000, tertiary education Docquier & Marfouk (2004) labor Trade union density, percentage employees in union OECD/ILO/Olimpieva (2011)

CODING ABSTRACT QUANTITY: QUOTAS & GENERAL BARRIERS How extensive were government efforts to control the quantity of labor migrants? +6 for any comprehensive moratorium. +5 for any limited moratorium, renewal prohibition, or quota reduction 50 percent. +4 for any general restrictions on employer hiring procedures for foreign workers. +3 for any quota reduced by <50 percent. +2 for any return program with financial incentives. +1 for no change. QUALITY: SKILL-BIASED BARRIERS How extensive were government efforts to control the quality of labor migrants? +6 for any comprehensive skill-biased reforms. +5 for any increase to income, education, or experience requirements. +4 for any exemption from quotas and employer hiring procedures for skilled positions. +3 for any change to occupational shortage lists that favors skilled workers. +2 for any introduction of a fast-track procedure for skilled workers. +1 for no change.

COUNTRIES & PEAK UNEMPLOYMENT Australia 5.59 Japan 5.05 Austria 5.07 Korea 3.73 Belgium 8.27 Mexico 5.45 *Brazil 8.08 Netherlands 4.46 Canada 8.29 New Zealand 6.53 *China 4.30 Norway 3.67 Czech Republic 7.28 Poland 9.97 Denmark 7.80 Portugal 12.74 Finland 8.70 *Russia 8.40 France 9.73 *Singapore 3.03 Germany 7.74 Slovak Republic 14.80 Greece 20.50 Spain 21.65 Hungary 11.30 Sweden 8.37 Iceland 7.77 Switzerland 3.71 *India 10.80 Turkey 14.03 Ireland 14.39 United Kingdom 8.02 Italy 8.43 United States 9.63

UNITED STATES HIGH = H-1. LOW = H-2. 200,000 160,000 Total U.S. work visas issued 120,000 80,000 High-skill Low-skill 40,000 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

CANADA HIGH = O/A/B. LOW = C/D. 100,000 Total Canadian work visas issued 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 Low-skill High-skill 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

SHORT-TERM DECLINES High-skill Low-skill U.S. 2007-2009 UE 4.6 9.3-28% -42% Canada 2008-2010 UE 6.0 8.3-8% -24%