TRACKING THE ECONOMY Immigrants and the U.S. Labor Market

Marcelli, Enrico

IT HAS BEEN MORE THAN A DECADE SINCE CALIFORNIA voters passed a ballot initiative entitled "Proposition 187." Though it was later declared unconstitutional, the measure would have denied...

...And they were significantly less likely to have used Medicaid, general public assistance or school lunch subsidies than U.S...
...Unauthorized immigrants tended to cluster in states where unemployment among these two vulnerable groups was lower...
...States, meanwhile, were permitted to exclude most noncitizens from three other important federal anti-poverty programs...
...This time, however, they investigated the impact of undocumented immigrants on the unemployment of U.S.-born youth and minority workers, and found Enrico Marcelli is assistant professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston and the 2003-2005 Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society Scholar at Harvard University...
...They reported that although legal immigrants had a small negative effect on the wages of U.S-born white workers in the U.S...
...Slightly less than two years later, passage of the federal-level welfare and illegal immigration acts in 1996 effectively barred not only unauthorized immigrants, but also almost all non-citizens from receiving food stamps and supplemental social security...
...born residents...
...Before 1994, only two quantitative studies employing random data had been published on this subject...
...The authors interpreted this finding as suggestive of labor market complementarity rather than substitution...
...But the legislative developments during the 1990s represented the first time in U.S...
...What is perhaps even more surprising about the measurement-sentiment gap and passage of the 1996 acts, is that not one empirical article on unauthorized immigrants' use of welfare using random data was published until the late 1990s...
...Census data...
...But the legislative developments during the 1990s represented the first time in U.S...
...Consider the claim that unauthorized immigrants take jobs away from, or depress the wages of, lower-skilled, U.S-born, minority workers...
...Furthermore, when it appeared, the findings produced by a team of researchers from the University of Southern California contradicted the fundamental premise underlying Proposition 187 and the 1996 acts...
...The authors interpreted this finding as suggestive of labor market complementarity rather than substitution...
...history that immigrant use of welfare caused a major immigration policy change...
...Before 1994, only two quantitative studies employing random data had been published on this subject...
...Taken together these sparse yet important findings rec- ommend that caution should be embraced when contemplating the economic effects of unauthorized immigration...
...The first was undertaken in the late 1980s by a team of University of Texas researchers using 1980 U.S...
...Southwest, undocumented Mexican immigrants actually had a small positive effect...
...residents concerning the impact of unauthorized immigration...
...Taken collectively the three policy initiatives reflect a lingering ambiguity felt by many U.S...
...Unauthorized immigrants tended to cluster in states where unemployment among these two vulnerable groups was lower...
...University of Toledo researchers in the early 1 990s used the same data...
...But perhaps more striking is the almost complete lack of credible, systematic research on the economic impact of unauthorized immigrants...
...Consider the claim that unauthorized immigrants take jobs away from, or depress the wages of, lower-skilled, U.S.-born, minority workers...
...an inverse relationship...
...This time, however, they investigated the impact of undocumented immigrants on the unemployment of U.S-born youth and minority workers, and found TRACKING THE ECONOMY by Enrico Marcelli an inverse relationship...
...States, meanwhile, were permitted to exclude most noncitizens from three other important federal anti-poverty programs...
...MARCH APRIL 2005 TRACKING THE ECONOMY Immigrants and the U.S...
...Second, they should demand that studies employing more recent data on unauthorized immigrants be undertaken...
...University of Toledo researchers in the early 1990s used the same data...
...As Mexico and the United States once again begin to discuss the possibility of a new amnesty or guest worker program, policymakers and the public should first recognize that very little evidence exists on how this might impact the United States...
...But perhaps more striking is the almost complete lack of credible, systematic research on the economic impact of unauthorized immigrants...
...Labor Market by Enrico Marcelli T HAS BEEN MORE THAN A DECADE SINCE CALIFORNIA voters passed a ballot initiative entitled "Proposition 187...
...history that immigrant use of welfare caused a major immigration policy change...
...Despite their lower relative income status, when unauthorized Mexican immigrants did use a public assistance program, the value of services received was substantially lower compared to other welfare recipients...
...Furthermore, when it appeared, the findings produced by a team of researchers from the University of Southern California contradicted the fundamental premise underlying Proposition 187 and the 1996 acts...
...Amid this dearth of credible studies, restrictionist immigration policy galloped apace...
...Targeting immigrants' behavior in the form of labor market competition in the United States certainly is not new...
...Amid this dearth of credible studies, restrictionist immigration policy galloped apace...
...My work with 1994 and 2001 Mexican survey data collected in Los Angeles County and more recent census data for California confirm the positive earnings and employment impact results of the two quantitative studies noted above...
...My work with 1994 and 2001 Mexican survey data collected in Los Angeles County and more recent census data for California confirm the positive earnings and employment impact results of the two quantitative studies noted above...
...Census data...
...They suggest that while it is tempting to think that unauthorized Latino immigrants harm the United States fiscally and threaten the employment and earnings opportunities of certain vulnerable groups of workers, in general, available measurements do not support this conclusion...
...Although it may be true that some unauthorized immigrants are motivated to migrate to the United States to tap into publicly available resources, it is generally recognized that most enter to build a better life for themselves and their families by securing a higher paying job...
...They reported that although legal immigrants had a small negative effect on the wages of U.S.-born white workers in the U.S...
...Taken collectively the three policy initiatives reflect a lingering ambiguity felt by many U.S...
...47 Immigrants and the U.S...
...More recent research suggests that unauthorized immigrants fill relatively undesirable jobs only after more socially integrated groups of workers migrate into more desirable occupations...
...Though it was later declared unconstitutional, the measure would have denied unauthorized immigrants access to all public benefits...
...They suggest that while it is tempting to think that unauthorized Latino immigrants harm the United States fiscally and threaten the employment and earnings opportunities of certain vulnerable groups of workers, in general, available measurements do not support this conclusion...
...Taken together these sparse yet important findings recommend that caution should be embraced when contemplating the economic effects of unauthorized immigration...
...Although it may be true that some unauthorized immigrants are motivated to migrate to the United States to tap into publicly available resources, it is generally recognized that most enter to build a better life for themselves and their families by securing a higher paying job...
...As Mexico and the United States once again begin to discuss the possibility of a new amnesty or guest worker program, policymakers and the public should first recognize that very little evidence exists on how this might impact the United States...
...Southwest, undocumented Mexican immigrants actually had a small positive effect...
...Though it was later declared unconstitutional, the measure would have denied unauthorized immigrants access to all public benefits...
...residents concerning the impact of unauthorized immigration...
...What is perhaps even more surprising about the measurement-sentiment gap and passage of the 1996 acts, is that not one empirical article on unauthorized immigrants' use of welfare using random data was published until the late 1990s...
...The first was undertaken in the late 1980s by a team of University of Texas researchers using 1980 U.S...
...More recent research suggests that unauthorized immigrants fill relatively undesirable jobs only after more socially integrated groups of workers migrate into more desirable occupations...
...Labor Market Enrico Marcelli is assistant professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston and the 2003 -2005 Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society Scholar at Harvard University...
...Targeting immigrants' behavior in the form of labor market competition in the United States certainly is not new...
...Slightly less than two years later, passage of the federal-level welfare and illegal immigration acts in 1996 effectively barred not only unauthorized immigrants, but also almost all non-citizens from receiving food stamps and supplemental social security...
...Second, they should demand that studies employing more recent data on unauthorized immigrants be undertaken...
...Rather than being more likely to have accessed any of several meanstested entitlement programs, unauthorized Mexican immigrants in 1995-1996 were no more likely to have done so than other residents of Los Angeles County...
...Despite their lower relative income status, when unauthorized Mexican immigrants did use a public assistance program, the value of services received was substantially lower compared to other welfare recipients...
...Rather than being more likely to have accessed any of several meanstested entitlement programs, unauthorized Mexican immigrants in 1995-1996 were no more likely to have done so than other residents of Los Angeles County And they were significantly less likely to have used Medicaid, general public assistance or school lunch subsidies than U.S.-born residents...

Vol. 38 • March 2005 • No. 5


 
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