Rethinking the gains from immigration

theory and evidence from the U.S.

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Gianmarco Ottaviano: Rethinking the gains from immigration (EBook, 2005, National Bureau of Economic Research)

electronic resource

English language

Published 2005 by National Bureau of Economic Research.

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"Recent influential empirical work has emphasized the negative impact immigrants have on the wages of U.S.-born workers, arguing that immigration harms less educated American workers in particular and all U.S.-born workers in general. Because U.S. and foreign born workers belong to different skill groups that are imperfectly substitutable, one needs to articulate a production function that aggregates different types of labor (and accounts for complementarity and substitution effects) in order to calculate the various effects of immigrant labor on U.S.-born labor. We introduce such a production function, making the crucial assumption that U.S. and foreign-born workers with similar education and experience levels may nevertheless be imperfectly substitutable, and allowing for endogenous capital accumulation. This function successfully accounts for the negative impact of the relative skill levels of immigrants on the relative wages of U.S. workers. However, contrary to the findings of previous literature, overall immigration generates a large positive effect …

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Subjects

  • Alien labor -- United States -- Economic aspects
  • United States -- Emigration and immigration -- Economic aspects