articleThe Quarterly Journal of EconomicsNov 1, 2003Closed access

The Labor Demand Curve is Downward Sloping: Reexamining the Impact of Immigration on the Labor Market

Harvard University

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Abstract

Immigration is not evenly balanced across groups of workers that have the same education but differ in their work experience, and the nature of the supply imbalance changes over time. This paper develops a new approach for estimating the labor market impact of immigration by exploiting this variation in supply shifts across education-experience groups. I assume that similarly educated workers with different levels of experience participate in a national labor market and are not perfect substitutes. The analysis indicates that immigration lowers the wage of competing workers: a 10 percent increase in supply reduces wages by 3 to 4 percent.

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Immigration
  • Economics
  • Labour economics
  • Supply and demand
  • Split labor market theory
  • Wage
  • Labor demand
  • Secondary labor market
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Decent work and economic growth
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