Type | Working Paper |
Title | Refining the estimation of immigration’s labor market effects |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
URL | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.579.6457&rep=rep1&type=pdf |
Abstract | Reviewing a large set of papers that analyzed the effect of immigration on the wages of nativeborn workers in the U.S., the National Academy of Science Panel on Immigration (1997) concluded “there is only a small adverse impact of immigration on the wage and employment opportunities of competing native groups.” Borjas (2003) argues that migration within the U.S. arbitrages local wage differentials and therefore the effects estimated in many previous studies are understated. He uses variation across skill groups over time in the national labor market and finds large negative impacts of immigration on the wages of native-born workers. A central theoretical prediction of his model is that the effect of immigration on wages should be equal across regions in the U.S. We test this prediction and reject it. The apparent effect of immigration on the wages of native born workers is three times larger in states with a durable goods manufacturing base. The effects are particularly large in manufacturing areas for high school dropouts and high school graduates the two groups most affected by deindustrialization. This suggests that the large effects reported in Borjas (2003) are at least in part driven by changes in labor demand. Immigrant share may be more a measure of labor demand than labor supply. We present several other pieces of evidence that suggest reason to doubt large negative estimates of immigrant share on the wages of native-born Americans. The measured effect of immigration on college graduates appears to be positive; this is traced to the number of college educated native born workers rising not the number of college educated immigrants workers rising. A rising supply of college graduates lowering wages is consistent with Murphy and Welsh (1992). Finally, we also show that the wages of high school dropouts were falling considerably preceding the rise in the fraction of the low-skilled workforce that were immigrants. |