1 / 19

Financial Education & Economic Inclusion The Immigrant Experience April 22, 2013

Realizing the Gains from Immigration R eform. Pia Orrenius Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Financial Education & Economic Inclusion The Immigrant Experience April 22, 2013.

quade
Download Presentation

Financial Education & Economic Inclusion The Immigrant Experience April 22, 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Realizing the Gains from Immigration Reform Pia Orrenius Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Financial Education & Economic Inclusion The Immigrant Experience April 22, 2013 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.

  2. Road map • Economic contributions of low-skilled immigrants • Likely gains from immigration reform

  3. Rising influx of foreign-born,low-skilled workers

  4. Over halfof migrants from Mexico, Central America lack a high school degree Note: Composition of educational attainment among immigrants by country of origin. Source: 2011 American Community Survey

  5. Immigrants fill some of the toughest jobs (low-education)

  6. Immigrants go where the jobs are Note: Coordinates indicate deviation from average foreign born population log growth (vertical axis) and from average state nonfarm payroll log growth (horizontal axis) from 1990 to 2009.

  7. Economic benefits of immigration • Immigrants benefit from higher wages • Family, origin from remittances • Natives also benefit • More workers, lower prices • Higher productivity through specialization; efficiency through mobility • Higher return to capital boosts investment • Immigration surplus $38-$75 billion per year • Complementary immigration, bigger boost

  8. Low-education immigrants have high employment rates compared to natives No High School Diploma

  9. Low-education immigrants have low unemployment rates when compared to natives No High School Diploma

  10. Immigrants earn 20 percent less than natives Real Median Weekly Earnings

  11. Immigration Reform Likely gains

  12. Unauthorized population as large as permanent resident population Source: Pew Hispanic Center

  13. Low-skilled: Work visa applicationsfar outstrip number available

  14. Immigration reform • Legalization for unauthorized immigrants • Work visas for low-skilled, non seasonal workers • Resolution of the green card queues • Currently extend decades for Mexicans

  15. Impacts of immigration reform • Migrants • Higher wages; better job matches • Restore circularity • Youth: better education, socio-economic outcomes • Natives/Previous migrants • Expand tax compliance; Even playing field • Improve working conditions • Any downsides?

  16. Concluding thoughts • Low-skilled immigration has been large, with high shares unauthorized • Outcome of robust labor demand, plentiful labor supply in Mexico • Increasingly costly, disruptive system • Immigration reform likely broadly beneficial • Timely too

  17. Low-skilled immigrants earn less Note: Median hourly wages among full-year workers by educational attainment and nativity. Source: 2011 American Community Survey

  18. “Immigration Surplus:” The rise in natives’ incomes from immigration • Labor force grows, output increases • Immigrants account for nearly one-half labor force growth since 1996 • Prices fall, return to land and capital rise. • Efficiency gains • Complement native workers at high, low ends of skill distribution • Fill jobs natives shun • Move to where jobs are • High-skilled: Boost innovation, entrepreneurship

More Related