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Labor Market and Fiscal Impacts of International Migration: Lectures 3 & 4 . Gordon H. Hanson UCSD and NBER. Introduction. Last three lectures What explains small scale, positive selection, and positive sorting in international migration Illegal migration Today
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Labor Market and Fiscal Impacts of International Migration: Lectures 3 & 4 Gordon H. Hanson UCSD and NBER
Introduction • Last three lectures • What explains small scale, positive selection, and positive sorting in international migration • Illegal migration • Today • What impact does international migration have on the labor markets of sending and receiving countries? • Do changes in national labor supply affect wages? • What are implications of global labor flows on fiscal accounts in sending countries for migrants? • Does outflow of labor increase net tax burden on those that remain?
Rising share of immigrants from low-income countries in the OECD
Theory • Consider migration from a low wage country (eg, Mexico) to a high wage country (eg, the US) • How would migration effect wages and national income in the two countries? • Assumptions • One good • Two factors of production, labor and capital • Only labor is mobile between countries • All factors are fully employed (can relax this) • Wage equals marginal revenue product
Solving for General Equilibrium • Putting the elements of the model together • Conditions for equilibrium in the labor market • Wage equals marginal revenue product of labor in US • WUS = PUS*MPLUS • Wage equals marginal revenue product of labor in Mexico • WMX = PMX*MPLMX • World labor supply • LUS + LMX = L
Solving for General Equilibrium • Conditions for equilibrium in markets for capital • Rental price of capital = revenue MP of capital: • US: RUS=PUS*MPKUS • MX: RMX = PMX*MPKMX • We assume capital is immobile between countries (or whatever capital will move already has) • As a result, equilibrium in K markets holds by assumption and remains in the background of the model • All action comes from competing national demands for labor
Demand for Labor in the US W PUS*MPLUS LUS
Demand for Labor in Mexico W PMX*MPLMX LMX
Global Supply of Labor W LUS → ← LMX L
Labor Market Equilibrium with Labor Mobility W 1 W1 PUS*MPLUS PMX*MPLMX LUS → ← LMX L1US L1MX
Labor Market Equilibrium without Labor Mobility W WUS WMX PMX*MPLMX PUS*MPLUS LUS → ← LMX L0MX L0US
Labor Market Equilibrium with Labor Mobility W WUS W1 WMX PMX*MPLMX PUS*MPLUS LUS → ← LMX L0MX L0US Immigrants
Labor Market Equilibrium with Labor Mobility W WUS A B W1 C F D WMX PMX*MPLMX E PUS*MPLUS LUS → ← LMX L0MX L0US Immigrants
Wage and Income Effects of Migration • US natives • Loss in labor income = A • Gain in capital income = B • Gain in GNP = B • Gain in GDP = B+C+D+E • Mexico natives • Gain in labor income (migrants) = C+D • Gain in labor income (non-migrants) = F • Loss in capital income = D+F • Gain in GNP = C • Loss in GDP = D+E • Gain in global GNP = B+C
Impact of Emigration on Wages • Does the exodus of labor due to emigration drive up wages in sending countries? • Estimated elasticity of wages with respect to emigration for Mexico: • Using nat’l data, 0.4-0.6 (Mishra, Aydemir & Borjas) • Using regional data, 0.7 (Hanson) • Problems in estimating the wage elasticity of emigration (all of which would appear to bias estimate toward zero): • Estimate is reduced form, net of effect of capital adjustment • Emigration may be negatively correlated with local wage shocks
Impact of Emigration on Wages • Estimation framework • Demand for labor (L): • Demand for leisure (H): • Labor supply constraint: • Solving for wages (W) as a function of emigration (M):
Impact of Emigration on Wages • Estimation framework • Specification: • The wage for a given education (E) and experience (X) cell at time t is a function of the emigration shock and other shocks • E, X, T dummies control for time-invariant shocks specific to each education/experience group and year-specific shocks for each education group and each experience group • Identification is based on variation in the emigration shock within education-experience groups over time
Emigrants as a share of male population by education group, Mexico 1960-2000
Labor impacts in receiving countries • There is an enormous literature on the impact of foreign labor inflows on the US labor market • Studies using national-level data find that immigration reduces wages for US native workers, with strongest effects being felt by low-skilled workers • Studies using city or state-level data find that immigration’s wage impacts are small • What are flaws in two approaches to studying labor market impacts of immigration? What is “true” impact of foreign labor inflows on labor markets?
National-level regression (Borjas, 2003) • Let yijt be the mean value of a particular labor market outcome for native with education s, experience x, in year t. Stack the data across skill groups and calendar years and estimate: yext = pext+ E + X + T + (E × T) + (X × T) + (E × X) + ext, • E are fixed effects indicating educational attainment; X are fixed effects indicating work experience; T are fixed effects indicating calendar year; p is the immigrant share in the skill group. • Regressions weighted by sample size of education-experience-year cell. Standard errors clustered by education-experience. • Problems with this approach: • Are there other shocks that could be correlated with immigration inflows (eg, skill biased technological change)? • What is counterfactual? Could immigration cause changes in technology (which would have changed fixed effects)?
National-level results for US Multiply these coefficients by 0.73 to get a numerically sensible elasticity: dy/d(% change in supply)
Correlation in native wages & immigrant inflows for US cities (Card, 2005)
Assessing the literature • National level data find negative correlation between native wages and immigrant inflows by skill group • Are all relevant shocks controlled for? • Could immigration affect technology? • Area studies find a zero correlation between wages for low-skilled natives and immigration inflows • Isn’t the size of the local immigrant population endogenous (with more immigrants in locations with higher wages)? • How does one instrument for local immigrant stock?
Resolving difference in results at national & local level • Possible explanations • Local technology is endogenous to labor supply (Acemoglu, 1998; Lewis, 2005) • Possible but insufficient data to evaluate to date • Internal native migration hides wage effects at local level (Card, 2001; Borjas, 2006) • Conflicting results in the literature • Explanations rejected by the data • Immigrant and natives are imperfect substitutes (Ottaviano & Peri, 2005) • Plausible but data are inconsistent with this hypothesis in the US • Sectoral output mix adjusts to absorb immigrants without wage effects as in HO model (Lewis, 2005; Hanson & Slaughter, 2001) • Data reject this hypothesis
Emigration and Remittances • Emigrants share income gains with family members through remittances • Fulfillment of migration contract (Lucas & Stark) and/or consumption smoothing across borders (Rosenzweig & Stark) • Positive income shock in emigrant’s country is associated with larger remittances to sending country (Yang) • Remittances support both consumption and investment spending (Yang) and may deepen financial markets (Woodruff et al.) • But there is no reason to believe primary motivation of remittances is investment in the sending country • Impediments to remittances • Service fees on money transfers average 11% and elasticity of remittances w.r.t. services fees is -0.15 (Freund & Spatafora)
Effects of emigration on public finances • The outflow of labor means that sending countries lose access to future tax payments of emigrants • But they also shed the obligation to provide departing workers with income transfers • What is net effect of tax loss and spending savings? • Presumption is that the net effect is negative • Most emigrants are relatively highly educated • Emigrants receive many of their lifetime transfers prior to their departure in the form of public education and child healthcare
Fiscal impacts of emigration in India (Desai et al.) • In 2000, individuals with tertiary education made up 60.5% of Indian emigrants but just 4.5% of India’s total population • Between 1990 and 2000, emigration rate for tertiary educated rose from 2.8% to 4.3% (but only 0.3% to 0.4% for total population • US has 64.6% of India’s skilled emigrants (48.9% of all Indian emigrants) • Estimation procedure • Produce counterfactual incomes: income emigrants would have earned in India based on observed characteristics and returns to these characteristics in India (using Mincer wage regression) • Calculate income tax losses by running counterfactual income through Indian income tax schedule (and calculate indirect tax losses) • Calculate expenditure savings by identifying categories for which savings would exist – eg, not interest payments and national defense • Emigration to US cost India net tax contributions of 0.24% of GDP in 2000, partially offset by the tax take on remittances of 0.1% of GDP
Other Impacts of Emigration • Does emigration affect international trade? • Bilateral migration is positively correlated with bilateral trade, though causality is unclear (Gould, Head & Reis) • Countries with larger bilateral Chinese populations do trade more, especially in differentiated products (Rauch & Trindade) • Does emigration affect international knowledge flows? • Chinese and Indian engineers in Silicon Valley have contributed to FDI and business formation in their home countries (Saxenian) • Countries that send students to democratic countries for university have stronger democratic leanings later on (Spilimbergo)
What We Don’t Know • The impact of emigration on wages and net tax revenues • Do results for Mexico and India generalize? • The impact of skilled emigration on the stock of human capital • What is the primary cause of skilled emigration? • Does skilled emigration cause a brain drain or a brain gain? • The relative contribution of labor productivity, returns to skill, and migration costs to migration flows • Are migration costs large enough to explain small migration flows? • Is there a skill bias in receiving country immigration policies? • How do sending-country policies affect emigration? • How does migration interact with trade and capital flows? • Are trade and migration substitutes or complements? • Do remittances help deepen financial markets?