1 / 52

Immigration and the U.S. Economy Where do we go from here?

Immigration and the U.S. Economy Where do we go from here?. The Houston Economics Club October 18, 2007. Pia Orrenius, Ph.D. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Disclaimer: the views expressed herein are those of the presenter; they do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Reserve

Télécharger la présentation

Immigration and the U.S. Economy Where do we go from here?

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. Immigration and the U.S. EconomyWhere do we go from here? The Houston Economics Club October 18, 2007 Pia Orrenius, Ph.D. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas 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. Overview • Immigration and • Population, labor force growth • Cyclical, regional effects • U.S. workers • Taxpayers • Policy

  3. U.S. immigration, population, and labor force growth

  4. The foreign-born population islarger than ever before Source: Census Bureau

  5. And foreign-born share of population headed toward historic peak Source: Census Bureau

  6. Three out of ten foreign-born are undocumented Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)

  7. Illegal inflows rival legal Source: Jeffrey Passel and Roberto Suro, Pew Hispanic Center (2005)

  8. Increasingly bimodal education distribution of foreign-born workers Percent Source: Ottaviano & Peri, 2005

  9. Foreign-born share of employment growth by selected jobs Percent 2003-2006 Source: BLS

  10. Share of workers who are undocumented by occupation Percent Overall share 4.9 Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)

  11. Projected foreign-born contribution to labor force growth significant as baby boomers retire Source: PEW Hispanic Center

  12. Foreign-born share of labor force growth by census division

  13. U.S. immigration, the business cycle and regional growth

  14. Immigrants work moreLabor Force Participation: Men Percent Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)

  15. Correction: male immigrants work moreLabor Force Participation: Women Percent Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)

  16. Unemployment rate of foreign-born, native-born very similar Source: BLS

  17. Immigrants are more mobile, responsive to economic growth • More likely come in good times, leave in bad times • Flexibility allows for faster economic growth, more efficient use of resources • Lower unemployment • Some immigrant groups are even more mobile once here • Move to where the jobs are • Fewer regional discrepancies in growth • Lower unemployment, regional convergence

  18. Skilled flows pro-cyclical H1-B petitions approved for initial employment Peak Post-recession Source: Department of Homeland Security

  19. “Real-time” immigration pro-cyclical Apprehensions along southwest border Source: DHS

  20. Apprehensions fall as demand in construction weakens Source: DHS; BLS

  21. Among less-educated, undocumented immigrants more mobile than natives Percent Source: Bean et al, 2007

  22. Among Mexican immigrants, illegals more mobile than legals Percent Source: Bean et al, 2007

  23. Among Chinese immigrants, illegals more mobile than legals Percent Source: Bean et al, 2007

  24. U.S. immigration andthe effect on natives

  25. Effects of immigration on natives • Immigration has effects similar to trade • Greater specialization, efficiency • More choice, innovation • 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)

  26. Effects of immigration on natives • Who loses? • Wage effects • Low-skilled native workers • Prior immigrants • Fiscal effects • Taxpayers

  27. Wages of less-skilled workers in long-run stagnation Real median weekly earnings by education level High school diploma, no college Source: BLS

  28. Wages of less-skilled workers in long-run stagnation Real median weekly earnings by education level High school diploma, no college Source: BLS

  29. 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

  30. Native-born labor force change, by education Thousands Source: 1996-2006; BLS, Haver Analytics

  31. Native and foreign-born labor force change, by education Thousands Source: 1996-2006; BLS, Haver Analytics

  32. 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

  33. Fiscal impact of immigration • Fiscal impact • Tax contributions minus transfer payments and cost of public services received • 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

  34. NRC: Immigrants have positive fiscal impact when including their descendants 1996 Dollars, NPV Level of Education Source: National Research Council, The New Americans (1997)

  35. NRC: But immigrants have a negative fiscal impact in their lifetime 1996 Dollars, NPV Source: National Research Council, The New Americans (1997)

  36. Immigrant households rely moreon public assistance Percent Household participation in public assistance programs Source: Center for Immigration Studies, March 2005 Current Population Survey

  37. U.S. immigration policy

  38. Walls on the Southern border are not new…

  39. Where do we go from here? • More enforcement • No-match program, Real ID Act, worksite raids • Local, state law enforcement cooperation w feds

  40. Worksite enforcement jumps in ‘06, ‘07 Source: DHS

  41. Where do we go from here? • More enforcement • No-match program, Real ID Act, worksite raids • Local, state law enforcement cooperation w feds • Less chance of reform • Issues need to be addressed • H-2B, H-1B visas, green card quotas outdated, insufficient • Existing illegal immigrants, inflows • Piecemeal reform? • Ag Jobs • DREAM Act

  42. No-match letter program: new safe harbor guidelines could have big impact • SSA sends no-match letters to employers with workers whose SS numbers don’t match their names • Under new rules, employers have to fire workers with unresolved no-matches within 90 days • If caught, employers assumed to have ‘constructive knowledge’ and may face stiff penalties • Massive interior enforcement policy, could impact millions of workers if enforced • Currently under preliminary injunction in U.S. District Court • If implemented, no-match could substantially grow the shadow economy

  43. Shadow economy small in U.S. Percent of GDP Source: Schneider (2000)

  44. …partly due to relatively low tax burden Cumulative tax rate % Percent of GDP Source: Schneider (2000)

  45. Conclusion • Foreign-born important role in economic growth • Benefits of immigration extensive • Labor market impacts limited; fiscal impact sizable • More enforcement without reform will grow the shadow economy; worsen fiscal effects

  46. Where undocumented immigrants live Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)

  47. Share undocumented immigrant workers by industry Percent Overall Proportion 4.9 Priv. Households Food mfg. Ag. Furniture mfg. Const. Textiles Food Svcs. Admin & Support Hotels Other mfg. Source: Pew Hispanic Center(2005)

  48. Foreign-born share of employment by sector Source: BLS (2006)

  49. Job-based green cards remain in short supply Source: Department of Homeland Security, Department of State

More Related