Econometrica: May, 2020, Volume 88, Issue 3
Tradability and the Labor-Market Impact of Immigration: Theory and Evidence From the United States
https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA16196
p. 1071-1112
Ariel Burstein, Gordon Hanson, Lin Tian, Jonathan Vogel
In this paper, we study how occupation (or industry) tradability shapes local laborâmarket adjustment to immigration. Theoretically, we derive a simple condition under which the arrival of foreignâborn labor into a region crowds nativeâborn workers out of (or into) immigrantâintensive jobs, thus lowering (or raising) relative wages in these occupations, and we explain why this process differs within tradable versus within nontradable activities. Using data for U.S. commuting zones over the period 1980â2012, we findâconsistent with our theoryâthat a local influx of immigrants crowds out employment of nativeâborn workers in more relative to less immigrantâintensive nontradable jobs, but has no such effect across tradable occupations. Further analysis of occupation labor payments is consistent with adjustment to immigration within tradables occurring more through changes in output (versus changes in prices) when compared to adjustment within nontradables, thereby confirming our model's theoretical mechanism. We then use the model to explore the quantitative consequences of counterfactual changes in U.S. immigration on real wages at the occupation and region level.
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Supplement to "Tradability and the Labor-Market Impact of Immigration: Theory and Evidence From the United States"
This appendix contains material not found within the manuscript.
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