Type | Working Paper |
Title | Wage gap profiles of a new group of Asian immigrants: effects of larger inflows |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://cream.conference-services.net/resources/952/2371/pdf/MECSC2011_0034_paper.pdf |
Abstract | This paper presents wage-gap profiles of a rapidly growing group of ”new” Asian immigrants from countries that were under-represented in the US until 1965. Entry-level wages and assimilation rates fall across cohorts. However the wage gap versus natives widens for all new Asian cohorts after the second decade of stay, which is not seen for other immigrant groups. I use an impact of immigration argument to investigate the difference in curvature. If occupations are imperfect substitutes, and natives and immigrants are worse substitutes than entrant and established immigrants within occupations, then the comparatively larger increases in occupation-specific new Asian inflows have a more negative impact on wages of new Asians, compared to other groups. The explanation is studied in a nested CES framework. Elasticity parameters are estimated using cross-metropolitan variations in occupational and immigrant labor supply. The paper follows Card (2009) to create an instrument for regional labor supplies. Finally, to assess the power of this explanation, I also use model estimates from 1990 to predict the wage gap between natives and new Asians in 2000 which can be attributed to competition from increased supply of substitutes. For each occupation, the model predicts a wage gap that is larger than the real gap - the difference arises from gains in quality in the 1990s made possible by an immigration policy that favored high-skill labor. |