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Immigrants in the U.S. Economy: A Host Country Perspective. Pia Orrenius, Ph.D. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Sam Houston State University Huntsville, Texas April 12, 2008. Disclaimer: The views expressed herein are those of the presenter;
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Immigrants in the U.S. Economy: A Host Country Perspective Pia Orrenius, Ph.D. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Sam Houston State University Huntsville, Texas April 12, 2008 Disclaimer: The views expressed herein are those of the presenter; they do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
Overview • Immigration • Population, labor force growth • Changing characteristics of foreign born • Reasons for coming: Cyclical, regional effects • U.S. workers • Taxpayers • Policy
The foreign-born population islarger than ever before Source: Census Bureau
And foreign-born share of population headed to historic peak Source: Census Bureau
Foreign-born share of employment growth substantial Percent 2003-2006 Source: BLS
Foreign-born share of employment growth by selected occupations Percent 2003-2006 Source: BLS
Increasingly bimodal education distribution of foreign-born workers Percent Source: Ottaviano & Peri, 2005
Illegal inflows rival legal Source: Jeffrey Passel and Roberto Suro, Pew Hispanic Center (2005)
Three out of ten foreign-born are undocumented Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)
Why do they come? • Economic conditions • Destination • Origin • Family reunification • Social or political conditions • War • Persecution
Real-time migration, U.S. and Mexican business cycles Thousands, SA Migrant apprehensions Source: CBP, Department of Homeland Security
Apprehensions a function of labor demand(Detrended employment, apprehensions lagged 6m) Thousands, SA Thousands, SA Employment Apprehensions Source: BLS, DHS
Among Mexican immigrants, illegals more mobile than legals Percent Source: Bean et al, 2007
Growth in the foreign-born population 1990-2006 Percent 0 - 99 100- 199 200- 299 300- 434 Source: Census, ACS
State GDP growth drives foreign-born population growth FB growth + GSP + FB growth + GSP - FB growth – GSP + FB growth – GSP - Source: Census, ACS, BEA
Effects of immigration on natives • Immigration has effects similar to trade • GDP rises, GDP per capita rises • Who benefits? • Immigrants • Bulk of GDP increase goes to them • Natives get $30 to $60 billion • Consumers • Prices of certain goods and services fall • Capitalists (investors, producers, homeowners)
Effects of immigration on natives • Who loses? • Wage effects • Low-skilled native workers • Prior immigrants • Fiscal effects • Certain taxpayers
Wages of less-skilled workers in long-run stagnation Real median weekly earnings by education level High school diploma, no college Source: BLS
Wages of less-skilled workers in long-run stagnation Real median weekly earnings by education level High school diploma, no college Source: BLS
Wage Effects of Immigration • Models with large adverse effects (Borjas 2003) • Assume perfect substitutability, no change in capital • 3% drop in native earnings on average • 9% drop for natives who are low-skilled • Other models (Ottaviano & Peri 2006) • Allow imperfect substitutability, change in K
Native-born labor force change, by education Thousands Source: 1996-2006; BLS, Haver Analytics
Native and foreign-born labor force change, by education Thousands Source: 1996-2006; BLS, Haver Analytics
Wage Effects of Immigration • Models with large adverse effects (Borjas 2003) • Assume perfect substitutability;no change in K • 3% drop in native earnings on average • 9% drop for natives who are low-skilled • Other models (Ottaviano & Peri 2006) • Allow imperfect substitutability, change in K • 2% rise in native earnings on average • 1% drop for low-skilled natives • Big declines for prior immigrants
Fiscal impact of immigration • Fiscal impact • Tax contributions minus transfer payments and cost of public services received, expressed in net present value • Tax contributions include • Payroll, income, sales, property taxes • Majority of illegal immigrants have payroll taxes withheld • Public transfers and services include • Education, health care, welfare (EITC, TANF), police and fire • Estimates • Gold standard: National Research Council (1997) • Recent work: Robert Rector’s piece for Heritage • Household-level analysis
NRC: Immigrants have positive fiscal impact when including their descendants 1996 Dollars, NPV Level of Education Source: National Research Council, The New Americans (1997)
NRC: But immigrants have a negative fiscal impact in their lifetime 1996 Dollars, NPV Source: National Research Council, The New Americans (1997)
Where is policy headed? • More interior enforcement • No-match program, Real ID Act, worksite raids, higher employer fines • E-verify: immigration status verification • Local, state enforcement of immigration laws • Local, state ordinances reg. illegal immigrants
No-match letter program: forthcoming safe harbor guidelines could have big impact • SSA sends no-match letters to employers with workers whose SS numbers don’t match names • Under original proposed rules, employers have to fire workers within 90 days • If caught, employers assumed to have ‘constructive knowledge’ and may face stiff penalties • If implemented without comprehensive reforms, no-match could impact millions of workers & grow shadow economy
Where do we go from here? • Implications of no-match, interior enforcemnt • Relative demand for illegal workers falls • Segmented labor markets • More employment off-the-books; Decline in tax receipts • Lower wages, worse working conditions for illegals • Turnover, lost benefit coverage • Move from large to small employers • Greater inequality; slower assimilation • Reallocation of workers across states, localities • Less illegal immigration, all other things same
Conclusion • Foreign-born important role in economic growth • Benefits of immigration extensive • Labor market impacts limited; fiscal impact sizable • Current policies & unintended consequences
Where undocumented immigrants live Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)