Migration Flashcards

1
Q

How is an increase in immigrants expected to impact native employment when they are substitutes?

A
  • Increase immigration = increase total labour supply
  • ^Ls = fall in wage and Increase employment
  • But fall in native employment level
  • More elastic labour demand = shallower curve = smaller fall in wage
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2
Q

How is an increase in immigration expected to impact natives when they are viewed as compliments?

A
  • Natives and immigrants don’t compete in the same labour market
  • Immigration makes natives more productive
    • ^imm = ^ LDn = ^E and ^w
  • Eg. Immigrant nurses making doctors more productive, therefore increasing doctors wage
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3
Q

What is the immigration surplus?

A
  • The idea that immigrants will increase the national income due to increased employment, but they wont get paid the same amount the country gains
  • The surplus is the gain in income minus the wages
  • The surplus accrues to the natives
    • Borjas estimated the value for the US as 0.13% of GDP which isnt significant
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4
Q

What factors affect the impact of immigrants on natives?

A
  1. Size of influx
  2. Substitutability between natives and immigrants
  3. Elasticity of labour demand
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5
Q

Explain general equilibrium effects.

A
  • Natives may move to other markets in response to an influx of immigrants
  • This leads to factor price equalisation
  • Labour supply increases after influx
  • As natives leave the supply contracts until the wage of the two markets are equal
  • Leads to an issue of measuring the true impact of the influx
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6
Q

What are other adjustment mechanisms that may lead to false estimates of immigration impact?

A

High skill vs low skill industries

  • ^unskilled workers (imm) = fall in wages = ^profitability
  • Unskilled industry expands and increases demand for labour
  • ^LD = ^w, no long run change in w

Change in Technology

  • Firms can choose different factors of production
  • ^LSLS = fall in wage = ^π
  • Firms adjust to make labour more intensive, ^LD = ^wage
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7
Q

How have empirical studeies on immigration impacts been attempted?

A

Two methods:

  1. Area studies approach, Card (1990) - local labour markets
  2. Skill groups, Borjas (2003) - education, potential experience and age to form labour markets
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8
Q

What aare the two empirical problems when analysing immigration?

A
  1. Endogeneity of migration decision
    • Immigrants likely to choose markets with high labour demand, likely to underestimate negative impacts
  2. Outmigration of Natives
    • general equilibrium effects - natives relocating, will underestimae effects
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9
Q

What methods did Card use to analyse the impact of immigrants?

A
  • Natural experiment - Mariel Boatlift
  • 1980 - Cubans who wanted to go to US could go from Port of Mariel
  • In 4 Months over 100k Cubans arrived in Miami increasing the labour force by 7%
  • Card compared the outcomes on Miami residents compared to residents of 4 comparison cities
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10
Q

What results did Card’s study yield?

A
  • Found that earnings stayed relatively stable for all in the area
  • There was no evidence that unemployment was negatively impacted by the influx
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11
Q

How did Card’s study attempt to overcome the two empirical problems?

A
  1. Endogenity - Miami was the cloests city to the port of Mariel so no selection to a particular labour market
    • Could argue in the long run they would only stay in Miami if the market was good
  2. G.E. effects - Decline in growth rate of population after so can see some evidence of general equilibrium effects at work
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12
Q

What was the potential issue with the study by Card?

A
  • Key assumption is that the control cities needed the same time trends as Miami
  • To highlight this Angrist and Krueger (2000) did another study
  • Diff - in - diff of placebo cuban influx gave results of an increase in black unemployment by 6.3% points.
  • But there was no actual change in the market, just in the trends
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13
Q

How does area atudies attempt to overcome the endogeneity issue?

A
  • Use of ‘natural’ or ‘quasi-experiments’
  • Examples where immigrants were randomly distributed into labour markets:
  1. Card (1990) Miami
  2. Foged and Peri (2016) Refugees in Denamrk
  • Example of exogenous supply shock:
    1. Dustman et al (2017) - commuting policy in Germany
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14
Q

How does empirical literature using area studies appraoch attempt to overcome the general equilibrium effetcs?

A

Card and DiNardo (2010)

  • Testing for outmigration, found natives dont leave after large influx
  • In their studies they actually found native growth rate and immigrate growth rate were positively correlated
    • OLS estimates could be upward biased if both groups are attracted by the same prospering cities
    • They repeated using fraction of Mexicans in a county to try and improve the study but stilll found a positive relationship
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15
Q

What is the key Skills Groups study and who completed it?

A

Borjas (2003)

Made cells/groups depending on:

  1. Decade born (5 groups, 1960-2000)
  2. Education level (4 groups)
  3. 5 year potential experience (8 groups)
  4. Total of 160 groups each affected differently by immigration
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16
Q

What were the results of the National skill cell approach study?

A
  • Between 1980 and 2000 immigrants grew as a percentage of the labour sgare
    • This growth was most concentrated among high school dropouts (by 2000 50% young dropouts foreign born)
  • Immigrants tend to be young, especially for poor educated immigrants
  • There was a negative correlation between immigrant supply and native wages
    • Scatter digram (x-%labour share, y- log wage)
    • College grads were only group where increase in imm share led to increased wages
17
Q

What were the problems of the national skill cell approach?

A
  • If labour is elastic, immigrantion affects native wage and employment, alters figures if only looking at wage
  • Debatable how different someone with 3-4 years experience is to someone with 5-6
  • Different definitions of skill groups imact results
18
Q

Which two economists were key to forming a migration deicision model?

A
  • Roy initially
  • Borjas (1987) formalised the Roy Idea
19
Q

What is negative selection?

A
  • Where if you are below the skill boundry you are better off in the destination country
  • Low skill workers more likely to move country
20
Q

What is positive selection for migration?

A
  • As skills improve you are more likely to get a higher wage in the destination country and are therefore likely to move
21
Q

Show positive and negative selection on a diagram

A
22
Q

What is the idea of migration costs?

A

Chiquiar and Hanson (2005) - found Mexican migrants came from the middle of the skill distribution

Expected negative selection

Explanation is the idea that migration costs may decline with higher skill levels