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The Unintended Consequences of International Capital Mobility on Immigration and Trade. Maggie Peters Stanford University IPES Conference November 15, 2008. The Puzzle. Two eras of globalization 1820-1914 1945-present First era was marked by mass migration but less trade
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The Unintended Consequences of International Capital Mobility on Immigration and Trade Maggie Peters Stanford University IPES Conference November 15, 2008
The Puzzle • Two eras of globalization • 1820-1914 • 1945-present • First era was marked by mass migration but less trade • Variation within the period: • Trade Protection: Great Britain low tariffs, US high tariffs • Immigration: Great Britain and US restrict immigration at the same time Brazil and Australia still funding passage • Second era has been marked by large amounts trade but much less migration • Variation within the period: • Trade: Gradual decrease in trade barriers throughout much of the world, but high tariffs remain in some states, for example within the Persian Gulf • Immigration: Varies from Japan (allows in very few immigrants) to states of the Persian Gulf (Qatar and UAE with almost 80% of population foreign born)
The Puzzle • Emerging Pattern • Often see open immigration policies combined with high levels of trade protection • Often see low levels of trade protection combined with closed immigration • Question of this paper – why do we see this pattern so often? • Putting Trade and Immigration together • Firms (and Portfolio Investors) have a choice • Produce (invest) at home • Produce (invest) overseas and ship the product back
Preferences of Firms • Choice of production location depends on • Trade protection back home (endogenous) • Is there enough protection to make production at home competitive? • Will the good be treated as a foreign good and will sales be hurt by protection? • Cost of labor (endogenous) • Cost of producing overseas (exogenous) • Transportation costs, transaction costs, risk of expropriation
Preferences of Firms • When capital is less mobile internationally, firms in labor scarce states want • Trade protection • Increases the price of the good, but also increases wages for labor • Open immigration • Keep the cost of labor down
Preferences of Firms • Increases in international capital mobility change preferences of all firms • Firms that produce overseas • Low trade barriers to their goods (and other goods) • And if immigration is costly, do not want immigration • Pro-free trade, Anti-immigration
Preferences of Firms • Firms that produce at home • Want other firms to leave the country, releasing their workers • Obtain cheaper labor without moving or importing it • Want protection on own good and no protection on other goods, but incentive to lobby tempered by mobility • Less mobile firms fight hard for protection for own good against protection for other goods • More mobile firms do not fight hard for protection on their own goods or against protection on other goods, as they have an outside option • Want less immigration (unless it can be targeted) • Pro-free trade, Anti-immigration • Capital mobility • Increases size of free trade lobby • Decreases size of open immigration lobby
International Capital Mobility • Changes in international capital mobility is the key parameter • Variation occurs due to • Technology • Changes in international investment climate/ security of investments abroad • Change in capital controls: assume that this is exogenous to the model • Cross-national variation in industry composition • Different mix of mobile and immobile industries
Other Interest Groups • Not all about capitalists • Labor: both high and low skilled • Immigrants: sometimes allowed to participate • Preferences of these groups do not change over capital mobility • Low Skilled Labor always wants trade protection and closed immigration • Immigrants want trade protection and open immigration • High Skilled Labor wants open trade and immigration so that prices are at world prices • Assumes majority of potential immigrants are low skilled • Assumes high skilled workers are not threatened by highly skilled immigrants
Equilibrium Policy Outcome • Need to assume objective function of policymaker • Use Grossman and Helpman (1994) • Policymaker cares only about contributions from interest groups and overall size of the economy • Policymaker chooses any level of trade protection and any number of immigrants • Equilibria based on • Power of groups to influence the government • Interests of groups: opposing, orthogonal, parallel • Importance of contributions versus overall size of the economy
Equilibrium Policy • No capital mobility • Capital (with immigrants) fights low skilled labor for open immigration • Low skill intensive capital bandwagons with low skilled labor (and immigrants) for protection • Trade protection paid for by immigration; immigration paid for by trade protection • Capital mobility (t=1) • Immigrants (and high skilled labor) fight capital and labor for open immigration • Stronger incentives for industries to fight trade protection in other industries • More trade protection for immobile industries than for mobile industries, lower trade protection and less immigration overall • Capital mobility (t=T+1) • Immigrants (and high skilled labor) fight capital and labor for open immigration • Off-shoring firms fight protection in own industry • Cascade effect: Off-shoring leads to less protection and immigration leading to more off-shoring
Conclusion • International Capital Mobility key parameter • Other important parameters • Cost of immigrants • Ability of groups to organize (especially labor) • Importance of contributions versus overall size of the economy or other factors to the policymaker • Equilibria policies • Obtain high levels of trade protection with high levels of immigration when capital mobility is low • Like many states in mid-19th Century, Persian Gulf today • Obtain low levels of trade protection with low levels of immigration when capital mobility is high • Like Great Britain at start of 20th Century, most of the OECD today • International Capital Mobility explains • Variation in immigration and trade policies over time • And variation between countries
The Formal Model: Utility Functions Government transfers and consumer surplus • Capital: Profit from capital Labor produced by capitalists Proportion of the population that owns this type of capital
The Formal Model: Utility Functions Government transfers and consumer surplus • Labor: Labor produced by labor times their wage Proportion of the population that is labor
The Formal Model: Utility Functions Government transfers and consumer surplus • Immigrants: Utility from immigration policy Labor produced by immigrants times their wage Extra transfer to immigrants Proportion of the population that is an immigrant
The Formal Model: Utility Functions Government transfers and consumer surplus • High Skilled Workers: Labor produced by high skilled workers Proportion of the population that is high skilled
The Formal Model: Policymaker’s objective function Labor produced by labor and immigrants Total transfers and consumer surplus Labor produced by capitalists and high skilled workers Profits of all firms
The Formal Model: Effects of a Price Change in Good i • For Capitalists who own good i: • For Capitalist who own good j: Table 2: Total effect of price increase of good i on good j
The Formal Model: Effects of a Price Change in Good i • For Labor: • For Immigrants: • For High Skilled Workers:
The Formal Model: The Effect of a Change in the number of immigrants • For Capitalists • For Labor • For Immigrants • For High Skill Workers where
Extension 1 – firms can move, t=1 • Firms are now allowed to move overseas • Move if • New welfare function for the firm:
Extension 1 – Effects of Offshoring • For other capitalists: • For labor: • For immigrants: • For high skilled workers, no direct effect. • For the government:
Extension 2 – Some firms have already moved • Welfare change due to price increase in good i for capitalists in good i who have moved • For firms who produce good j overseas • Change in immigration policy for firms that offshore