The Labor Market Impact of Immigration: Recent Research. George J. Borjas Harvard University April 2010

Similar documents
Labor Market Policy Core Course: Creating Jobs in a Post- Crisis World. March 28- April 8, 2011 Washington, D.C. -- World Bank HQ- Room I2-250

The Labor Market Impact of Immigration. George J. Borjas Harvard University October 2006

The Analytics of the Wage Effect of Immigration. George J. Borjas Harvard University September 2009

George J. Borjas Harvard University. September 2008

The Impact of Immigration on Wages of Unskilled Workers

Immigrant-native wage gaps in time series: Complementarities or composition effects?

Immigration and the US Wage Distribution: A Literature Review

WORKING PAPERS IN ECONOMICS & ECONOMETRICS. A Capital Mistake? The Neglected Effect of Immigration on Average Wages

IMMIGRATION ECONOMICS ECONOMICS 980u, Fall 2012 Department of Economics Harvard University

Does Immigration Reduce Wages?

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE WAGE IMPACT OF THE MARIELITOS: ADDITIONAL EVIDENCE. George J. Borjas

Wage Trends among Disadvantaged Minorities

Volume 35, Issue 1. An examination of the effect of immigration on income inequality: A Gini index approach

Does Immigration Help or Hurt Less-Educated Americans? Testimony of Harry J. Holzer before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee

IMMIGRATION ECONOMICS ECONOMICS 980u, Fall 2014 Department of Economics Harvard University

Complementarities between native and immigrant workers in Italy by sector.

Does Immigration Harm Native-Born Workers? A Citizen's Guide

Attenuation Bias in Measuring the Wage Impact of Immigration. Abdurrahman Aydemir and George J. Borjas Statistics Canada and Harvard University

Lecture Note: The Economics of Immigration. David H. Autor MIT Fall 2003 December 9, 2003

CROSS-COUNTRY VARIATION IN THE IMPACT OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION: CANADA, MEXICO, AND THE UNITED STATES

Do (naturalized) immigrants affect employment and wages of natives? Evidence from Germany

IMMIGRATION IN HIGH-SKILL LABOR MARKETS: THE IMPACT OF FOREIGN STUDENTS ON THE EARNINGS OF DOCTORATES. George J. Borjas Harvard University

III. Wage Inequality and Labour Market Institutions

International Migration

Effects of Immigrants on the Native Force Labor Market Outcomes: Examining Data from Canada and the US

The Effect of Immigration on Native Workers: Evidence from the US Construction Sector

Econ 196 Lecture. The Economics of Immigration. David Card

Do Recent Latino Immigrants Compete for Jobs with Native Hispanics and Earlier Latino Immigrants?

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE LABOR MARKET IMPACT OF HIGH-SKILL IMMIGRATION. George J. Borjas. Working Paper

Rethinking the Area Approach: Immigrants and the Labor Market in California,

Immigration: The Effects on Low-Skilled and High-Skilled Native-Born Workers

The Impact of Immigration: Why Do Studies Reach Such Different Results?

POLICY Volume 5, Issue 8 October RETHINKING THE EFFECTS OF IMMIGRATION ON WAGES: New Data and Analysis from by Giovanni Peri, Ph.D.

Low skilled Immigration and labor market outcomes: Evidence from the Mexican Tequila Crisis

Labor Market Consequences of Immigration. Econ/Demog C175 Economic Demography Prof. Goldstein Spring 2018, UC Berkeley

Immigration and property prices: Evidence from England and Wales

Empirical Estimates of the Long-Run Labor Market Adjustments to Immigration

LABOR OUTFLOWS AND LABOR INFLOWS IN PUERTO RICO. George J. Borjas Harvard University

SUP-311 The Economic Impact of Immigration

Immigration and National Wages: Clarifying the Theory and the Empirics

Economics of Migration

Using Minimum Wages to Identify the Labor Market Effects of Immigration

Immigration Policy In The OECD: Why So Different?

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES IMMIGRANTS' COMPLEMENTARITIES AND NATIVE WAGES: EVIDENCE FROM CALIFORNIA. Giovanni Peri

The task-specialization hypothesis and possible productivity effects of immigration

Immigration and the Economic Status of African-American Men

DRAFT, WORK IN PROGRESS. A general equilibrium analysis of effects of undocumented workers in the United States

CEP Discussion Paper No 754 October 2006 The Impact of Immigration on the Structure of Male Wages: Theory and Evidence from Britain

STATEMENT OF PATRICIA A. BUCKLEY, PH.D. SENIOR ECONOMIC ADVISOR U.S

ABSTRACT LABOR MARKET. While the economic effects of immigration have recently become topics of debate

The Wage Impact of the Marielitos: A Reappraisal

EPI BRIEFING PAPER. Immigration and Wages Methodological advancements confirm modest gains for native workers. Executive summary

Immigration and Wages: Decoding the Economics

Immigration: The Effects on Low-Skilled and High- Skilled Native-Born Workers

Migration, Wages and Unemployment in Thailand *

Immigration and Production Technology. Ethan Lewis * Dartmouth College and NBER. August 9, 2012

The Impact of Immigration: Why Do Studies Reach Such Different Results?

Semih Tumen Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, and IZA, Germany. Cons. Pros

THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION ON IMMIGRATION

The Impact of High-Skilled Immigration on the Wages of U.S. Natives

Immigration, Human Capital and the Welfare of Natives

Immigration and Production Technology. Ethan Lewis * Dartmouth College and NBER. July 20, 2012

Immigration and Production Technology

Immigration and Firm Expansion

The Effects of Immigration on Wages:

How do rigid labor markets absorb immigration? Evidence from France

The labour market impact of immigration

GSPP June 2008

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE ANALYTICS OF THE WAGE EFFECT OF IMMIGRATION. George J. Borjas. Working Paper

Abstract/Policy Abstract

CHOICES The magazine of food, farm, and resource issues

Gains from "Diversity": Theory and Evidence from Immigration in U.S. Cities

Skilled Immigration, Innovation and Wages of Native-born American *

The Impact of Immigration: Why Do Studies Reach Such Different Results?

Immigration is a contentious issue in the industrialized nations of the

31E00700 Labor Economics: Lecture 6

December Do Doctors Lose from the Immigration of Doctors?* Per Lundborg** CEIFO, Stockholm university and SULCIS, Stockholm university

Rethinking the Effects of Immigration on Wages

Immigrants are playing an increasingly

Labor Market Dropouts and Trends in the Wages of Black and White Men

Immigration, Wages, and Education: A Labor Market Equilibrium Structural Model

Walls or Welcome Mats? Immigration and the Labor Market

Immigration Wage Effects by Origin

University of California, Berkeley Fall Economics 152 Wage Theory and Policy. Syllabus 08/28/07

The Economic and Social Review, Vol. 42, No. 1, Spring, 2011, pp. 1 26

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES IMMIGRATION AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF INCOMES. Francine D. Blau Lawrence M. Kahn

(V) Migration Flows and Policies. Bocconi University,

The Impact of Immigration on Wage Dynamics: Evidence from the Algerian Independence War

The Dynamic Impact of Immigration on Natives Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from Israel *

The Association between Immigration and Labor Market Outcomes in the United States

Does immigration, particularly increases in Latinos affect African American wages, unemployment and incarceration rates?

The Impact of Foreign Workers on the Labour Market of Cyprus

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 13 LABOR AND WAGES March 2, 2017

MAR. Institutionalist Review and Analysis of Immigration Effects on U.S. Jobs Markets

What drives the substitutability between native and foreign workers? Evidence about the role of language

The Economics of Immigration

The Labor Market Challenge

American Law & Economics Association Annual Meetings

IMMIGRATION AND LABOR PRODUCTIVITY. Giovanni Peri UC Davis Jan 22-23, 2015

Immigration s Impact on American Workers

Transcription:

The Labor Market Impact of Immigration: Recent Research George J. Borjas Harvard University April 2010

1. The question Do immigrants alter the employment opportunities of native workers? After World War I, laws were passed severely limiting immigration. Only a trickle of immigrants has been admitted since then...by keeping labor supply down, immigration policy tends to keep wages high. Let us underline this basic principle: Limitation of the supply of any grade of labor relative to all other productive factors can be expected to raise its wage rate; an increase in supply will, other things being equal, tend to depress wage rates Paul Samuelson, Economics, 1964.

2. The empirical puzzle Summary of findings (circa 2000): Friedberg and Hunt (1995, p. 42): The effect of immigration on the labor market outcomes of natives is small. National Academy of Sciences (1997, p. 220): The weight of the empirical evidence suggests that the impact of immigration on the wages of competing native workers is small. Puzzle: The immigrant supply shock in the United States has been very large, and Hamermesh (1993) concludes that the labor demand curve is not perfectly elastic. Why can t we observe an impact?

3. Spatial correlation approach Suppose there are a number of closed labor markets that immigrants penetrate randomly. We can then relate the change in the wage in a particular market to the number of immigrants in that market. The estimated correlation measures the impact of immigration. Immigrants cluster in a small number of geographic areas. Most studies exploit this geographic clustering to test the implications of the textbook model. Grossman (1982), Borjas (1987), Altonji and Card (1991), LaLonde and Topel (1991), Schoeni (1997), Card (2001). Most influential study: Card s (1990) analysis of the Mariel flow.

4. Card s (1990) Mariel paper The Mariel flow (Card, 1990) The Mariel flow that didn t happen (Angrist & Krueger, 1999) Unemployment rate of blacks in: Before (1979) After (1981) Before (1993) After (1995) Miami 8.3 9.6 10.1 13.7 Comparison cities 10.3 12.6 11.5 8.8 The comparison cities are Atlanta, Houston, Los Angeles, and Tampa-St. Petersburg.

5. Problems with spatial correlations Immigrants may not be randomly distributed across labor markets. If immigrants cluster in cities with thriving economies, there would be a spurious positive correlation between immigration and local employment conditions (Borjas, 2001). Local labor markets are not closed. Natives may respond to the immigrant supply shock by moving their labor or capital to other cities, thereby reequilibrating the national economy. There is an unresolved debate over whether these equilibrating flows exist. See Borjas, Freeman, Katz (1997), Card (2001), Borjas (2006). Measurement error (Aydemir and Borjas, 2010)

6. A new type of natural experiment After a wave of raids by federal immigration agents on Labor Day weekend, a local chicken-processing company called Crider Inc. lost 75% of its mostly Hispanic 900-member work force. The crackdown threatened to cripple the economic anchor of this fading rural town. But for local African- Americans, the dramatic appearance of federal agents presented an unexpected opportunity. Crider suddenly raised pay at the plant. An advertisement in the weekly Forest-Blade newspaper blared Increased Wages at Crider, starting at $7 to $9 an hour more than a dollar above what the company had paid many immigrant workers. (The Wall Street Journal, January 17, 2007) Implied wage elasticity = -0.20

7. An alternative approach (Borjas, QJE, 2003) First, pay closer attention to the definition of a skill group. Both schooling and work experience determine a person s stock of acquired skills. Immigration is not balanced evenly across all experience cells in a particular schooling group. The immigrant influx will tend to affect some native workers more than others. And the nature of the supply imbalance changes over time. Second, local labor market may not be the right unit of observation. So examine evolution of national wage structure (in the spirit of Murphy-Welch, 1992; Katz-Murphy, 1992, Card and Lemieux, 2001). This approach reconfirms that the labor demand curve is indeed downward sloping: An influx of immigrants into a particular skill group lowers the wage of that skill group.

Decadal change in log weekly wage 8. Scatter diagram relating wages and immigration (removing decade effects) 0.2 0.1 0-0.1-0.2-0.1-0.05 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 Decadal change in immigrant share

9. A structural approach A structural approach specifies the technology of the aggregate production function. One can then estimate the own-effect of immigrants on the wage of competing native workers and the cross-effects on the wage of other natives. Suppose the aggregate production function can be represented in terms of a three-level CES technology: Similarly educated workers with different levels of work experience are aggregated to form the effective supply of an education group; and workers across education groups are then aggregated to form the national workforce.

10. The three-level CES technology v Q t Kt K t Lt L t v 1/v 1,with v 1. KL L t s st L st 1/,with 1 1 E. L st x sx L sxt 1/,with 1 1 X.

11. Advantages of three-level CES There are 33 factors of production: 32 educationexperience groups plus capital. A non-structural specification requires estimating 1,089 parameters. Introducing symmetry restrictions reduces this to 561 different parameters. The threelevel CES reduces the parameter space to three elasticities of substitution. Main disadvantage: the CES greatly restricts the types of substitution that can exist. Results are extremely sensitive to assumption about the trend in the relative demand of education groups. Katz-Murphy assumed linear trend. This is NOT an innocuous assumption.

12. Predicted impact of 1980-2000 immigrant influx Education group: Short run Long run All workers -3.4% 0.0% High school dropouts -8.2-4.8 High school graduates -2.2 1.2 Some college -2.7 0.7 College graduates -3.9-0.5 Source: Borjas and Katz, 2007. Short run: Capital stock is fixed Long run: Rental price of capital is fixed

13. Ottaviano-Peri long run simulation, 2006, Table 7

14. Card, 2009 Impact of immigration disappears if, in addition to the Ottaviano-Peri complementarity, one also assumes that: High school dropouts and high school graduates are perfect substitutes. Why does this matter? Note specification of the CES relative wage equation: relative wages depends on relative quantities. Suppose we define skill groups in such a way that immigration doesn t affect relative quantities much (e.g., high school equivalents and college equivalents). Then: Immigration cannot have a wage impact. So question becomes: are hs dropouts and hs graduates perfect substitutes?

15. Conclusion Wage response to immigration is a crucial parameter in any assessment of the efficiency and distributional impact of international migration. Previous estimates particularly those at the MSA level may have underestimated the impact because of attenuation bias introduced by sampling error and behavioral responses. A number of puzzles and confusing conjectures remain: Why do spatial correlations lead to contradictory conclusions in the minimum wage and immigration literatures? How do pre-existing workers respond to immigration? How does capital respond to immigration? How long does it take to reach the long run? Does immigration lead to factor price equalization?

16. References Borjas, George J. The Labor Demand Curve Is Downward Sloping: Reexamining the Impact of Immigration on the Labor Market, Quarterly Journal of Economics 118 (November 2003): 1335-1374. Ottaviano, Gianmarco, and Giovanni Peri. 2005. Rethinking the Gains from Immigration: Theory and Evidence from the U.S., NBER Working Paper No. 11672, October 2005. Borjas, George J., Jeffrey Grogger, and Gordon H. Hanson. 2008. Imperfect Substitution between Immigrants and Natives: A Reappraisal, NBER Working Paper No. 13887. Card, David. 2009. Immigration and Inequality, American Economic Review 99(2): 1-21.