Attitudes toward Highly Skilled and Low-skilled Immigration: Evidence from a Survey Experiment
Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Harvard University Press
Abstract
Past research has emphasized two critical economic concerns that appear to generate anti-immigrant sentiment among native citizens: concerns about labor market competition and concerns about the fiscal burden on public services. We provide direct tests of both models of attitude formation using an original survey experiment embedded in a nationwide U.S. survey. The labor market competition model predicts that natives will be most opposed to immigrants who have skill levels similar to their own. We find instead that both low-skilled and highly skilled natives strongly prefer highly skilled immigrants over low-skilled immigrants, and this preference is not decreasing in natives' skill levels. The fiscal burden…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 132.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 83
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Immigration
- Competition (biology)
- Economics
- European Social Survey
- Welfare
- Ethnocentrism
- Preference
- Demographic economics
- No poverty