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Title: The other economic question: Immigration's impact on the economy


1
The other economic question Immigration's impact
on the economy by Arthur Sweetman for
Metropolis CSPS webinar Dec. 2008
2
Structure of the talk
  • Background
  • Dramatic decline in labour market outcomes
  • Arrivals and departures
  • Intergenerational and conditional earnings
  • The economic impact of immigration on the
    domestic economy
  • Traditional Canadian conclusions
  • Several key concepts ( a few controversial
    results)
  • Conclusions

3
PART 1 BACKGROUND 1.1 Dramatic Decline in
Labour Market Outcomes
  • There has been a decline in labour market
    earnings for recent arrival cohorts
  • There is a substantial rate of economic
    integration, but the time required to catch-up
    with the Canadian born is increasing
  • Close to, or beyond, retirement for many
  • Even if catch-up occurs, life-time earnings
    difference is substantial

4
Warman and Worswick (2004)
5
  • Warman and Worswick (2004)

6
Having incomes below the low income cut-off
(LICO) is increasingly common for immigrants
Business Cycle Peaks in 1980, 1990 2000
Source Statistics Canada Picot Hou (2003)
7
Post 2000? Did Outcomes Improve?
  • Most analysis uses 2000 census
  • We had hoped that labour market outcomes would
    improve
  • But, they did not
  • Arguably, the decline continued then a return
    to 2000 levels

8
2000 census year
Note Comparison group Canadian born plus
immigrants more than 10 years Source Statistics
Canada, Picot, Hou and Coulombe, 2007
9
1.2 Related background issues
  • Arrivals
  • Departures
  • Generational look at who is in Canada
  • Earnings in a more complex framework
  • By generation
  • With and without adjusting for observable
    characteristics

10
Source CIC, Facts Figures
11
Departures (Are immigrants staying?) Retention
rates for males age 25-35 at landing
Source Statistics Canada, Aydemir and Robinson,
2006
12
1.3 Generational Population Shares ()

Immig 2nd Gen 3rd Gen Non-Vismin 3rd Gen Vismin plus N
US 14.6 6.0 63.7 15.7 304,165
Cda 22.6 14.3 60.1 3.0 814,054
  • Sample is aged 25-65, Cdn 2001 census, US 1998-04
    CPS
  • 3rd Generation Vismin plus includes those who
    self identify as visible minorities, aboriginals
    and citizens at birth born outside of Canada
  • Source Aydemir and Sweetman (2008)

13
Age controls in all regressions. Source
Aydemir and Sweetman (2008)
14
Age controls in all regressions. Source
Aydemir and Sweetman (2008)
15
Overall
  • The big policy story is that there has been a
    remarkable decline in the labour market earnings
    of recent immigrant arrival cohorts
  • The entry effect has increased dramatically
  • The integration rate appears to have increased,
    but the catch-up time is much longer than
    previously
  • This has lead to a substantial increase in
    poverty for new immigrants
  • The decline appears to be larger when control for
    the observable characteristics of the immigrants
    (esp., age, education)

16
PART 2 Immigrations economic impact on the
domestic economy
  • Little research on this for Canada
  • Some US and other work
  • Some international lessons, but, not possible to
    simply apply other countrys results to Canada
  • SUMMARY Most analysts suggest that immigrations
    impact on GDP/capita is probably positive, but
    quite small
  • (and some say potentially negative)

17
2.1 Two traditional views differ on direction,
but agree that any impact is small in magnitude
  • Macdonald Commission research overview said
  • The broad consensus is that high levels of
    immigration will increase aggregate variables
    such as labour force, investment and real gross
    expenditure, but cause real income per capita
    and real wages to decline Marr and Percy, 1985,
    p 77

18
The Economic Council of Canada (Swan et al. 1991)
was more positive on some dimensions and
concludes
  • In contrast to previous investigators in Canada
    and Australia, we do find that immigration
    enhances economic efficiency within the host
    community. The effect flows almost exclusively
    from the greater size of the population that
    immigration brings. the gross efficiency gains
    are positive but very small

19
What is at issue in economic context?
  • Traditionally, economic impacts have been
    viewed as the value to those already in the
    country (Canadian born and previous immigrants)
    of new immigration
  • Alternatively, (though not taken up here) could
    look at impact of immigration on new immigrants,
    or on subset of the population

20
2.2 Some key ideas
  1. Economic vs. social costs/benefits
  2. Aggregate (e.g., GDP) vs. individual (e.g.,
    GDP/capita) costs/benefits
  3. Economies of scale in production
  4. Complementarities vs. substitutes in production
  5. beneficial spillovers vs. displacement
  6. Demographics (baby boom aging)
  7. Fiscal/tax implications
  8. Product market implications
  9. International trade implications
  10. Also other issues (e.g.,)
  11. Supply of physical capital
  12. Geographic distribution

21
2.2.1 Economic vs. Social/Cultural Impacts
  • Note that an impact is a change from what would
    otherwise have been the case
  • E.g., How much more are people earning because of
    new immigration?
  • Distinct question from how much are people
    earning?
  • Very difficult question to answer
  • The focus today is on economic issues
  • BUT, could alternatively look at, for example,
    social and/or cultural impacts

22
2.2.2 Absolute versus per person (or per capita)
  • Confusion between the impact of immigration on
    the aggregate size of the economy, in contrast to
    the impact per capita
  • Consider GDP (not ideal measure, but )
  • Immigration clearly has an impact on the total
    size of the Canadian economy
  • GDP increases as more people are economically
    active
  • However, most people care about GDP/capita
  • That is, the standard of living of Canadians
  • Future immigrations impact on the standard of
    living of those already in the country is not
    well understood
  • Probably small effect
  • Economic impact is more than labour market
    earnings (eg price of goods)
  • Distribution of different impacts across the
    population
  • Individuals experience very different economic
    impacts

23
2.2.3 Economies of scale in production (key
traditional economic benefit of immigration)
  • IDEA Holding the structure of the economy
    constant, what happens when its size is
    increased?
  • Immigration is, of course, never a pure scale
    effect
  • Most observers think constant returns to scale
    (CRS) is most reasonable today
  • No benefit or harm from modest changes in size
  • Increased global trade decreases need for local
    markets
  • Personally perhaps still small benefits from
    scale for Canada
  • Implies no (or little) economic benefit from
    pure scale increases

24
2.2.4 Benefits from Compositional Changes
  • Most observers think that any economic benefits
    derive from beneficially altering the composition
    of economic factors of production
  • Want complementarities (as opposed to
    substitutes) in production (e.g.,)
  • DIFFERENT Age distribution
  • Different skill distribution (filling holes
    when/where shortages)
  • Education, trade expertise, entrepreneurship
  • But, stopped (now restarted) occupational
    targeting
  • Physical/financial capital
  • Want (net) positive externalities

25
If structure of new immigrant flows too similar
to existing stocks (esp. where no shortages),
then general equilibrium effects imply some
displacement of existing resources may occur
  • Some concern about new factors of production
    reducing the value of existing factors, or
    changing their relative value
  • A large inflow of skilled workers might require a
    large amount of complementary physical capital to
    be productive if physical capital not fast
    enough in adjusting, could alter short run
    capital/labour ratio and increase economic return
    to owners of physical capital relative to human
    capital (Beaudry and Green)

26
Displacement in the labour market
  • Methodologically difficult question to address
  • In-country geographic mobility may undo local
    effects so that immigration has national wage
    impacts
  • Controversial Canada-US-Mexico study finds a 1
    increase in the immigrant population depresses
    wages 0.3 to 0.4 (Aydemir Borjas)
  • But, uneven across skill groups
  • E.g., New high skilled workers likely mostly
    substitute for existing high skilled workers (may
    complement low skilled workers) wage effects
    follow
  • New domestic entrants into the labour market are,
    on average, also highly skilled

27
2.2.5 DEMOGRAPHICS - Immigrations effect on the
demographic structure is very modest
  • Immigration can, clearly, be quite effective at
    increasing the size of the population/ labour
    force
  • Less effective at changing the composition/structu
    re
  • Even doubling current immigration rate would have
    relatively small impacts on the age distribution
    over long periods
  • However, (though neither has major impact)
  • As the Canadian population ages impact might grow
  • But, new immigrant average age is also increasing
  • Could alter policy to focus toward younger
    immigrants

28
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29
2.2.6 Fiscal/Tax issues
  • Very little is known (Good area for future
    research)
  • New immigrants inherit share of outstanding flow
    of costs (e.g., existing government debt), and
    also share of benefits (e.g., natural resource
    endowment)
  • Not clear how this balances on the margin
  • Taxes and transfers
  • Lower immigrant earnings imply lower taxes and
    greater social transfers (Devoretz Pivnenko)
  • May be unexpected redistributional effects
  • US taxpayers in states with high fractions of
    immigrants do not benefit, whereas those in
    states with few immigrants do (costs local
    benefits national)

30
2.2.6 Product Market Effects
  • Even less is known than on fiscal side
  • Some arguments that were it not for immigration
  • Entire industries would not exist (or would be
    dramatically smaller)
  • Product market prices would be a lot higher for
    some goods
  • But, unclear how this interacts with
    international trade

31
2.2.7 International Trade
  • Again, very little is known
  • Head and Ries (1998) find that a 10 increase in
    immigration is associated with a 1 increase in
    source country exports, and a 3 increase in
    imports
  • Various discussions about international
    competitiveness go in opposite directions
  • Not clear how flows of workers and good
    counterbalance each other

32
3. Conclusion
  • Immigration is part of the fabric of Canadian
    society
  • Clear social/cultural benefits
  • But, labour market outcomes for new immigrants
    have declined substantially over a few decades
  • Useful to distinguish between, for example,
    earnings, and earnings conditional on
    characteristics

33
  • Despite popular beliefs in the economic and
    demographic benefits (or, some argue, costs) of
    immigration, the evidence does not currently
    appear to support there being either large
    economic benefits or costs
  • However, there is scant evidence on impacts and
    it is controversial
  • Small total economic benefits is probably the
    best summary at the moment
  • There is likely a broad distribution of effects
    with different sets of individuals experiencing
    different impacts
  • Given, for example, issues of complementarities
    and substitution, the details of immigration
    policy and the management of the immigration
    system likely have important ramifications for
    the economic impact on sub-populations and the
    nation as a whole

34
Suggestions for further reading (mostly overviews)
  • Aydemir, Abdurrahman and George J. Borjas. 2006.
    A comparative analysis of the labor market
    impact of international migration Canada,
    Mexico, and the United States. NBER Working
    Paper Series No. 12327.
  • Aydemir, Abdurrahman and Chris Robinson. 2006.
    Return and Onward Migration among Working Age
    Men. Analytical Studies Research Paper Series,
    No. 273. Catalogue no.11F0019. Ottawa Statistics
    Canada.
  • Aydemir, Abdurrahman and Arthur Sweetman. 2008.
    First and Second Generation Immigrant
    Educational Attainment and Labor Market Outcomes
    A Comparison of the United States and Canada.
    Research in Labor Economics, 27 215-70.
  • Beaujot, Roderic. 2003. Effect of Immigration on
    Demographic Structure. Canadian Immigration
    Policy for the 21st Century, eds. Charles Beach,
    Alan Green and Jeffrey Reitz. Kingston, Ontario
    McGill-Queens U. Press, 49-91.
  • Borjas, George J. 1999. The Economic Impact of
    Immigration. Handbook of Labor Economics, Vol.
    3A, eds. O. Ashenfelter and D. Card. Amsterdam
    North-Holland, 1697-1760.
  • Dustmann, Christian, Francesca Fabbri, Ian
    Preston, Jonathan Wadsworth. 2006. The local
    labour market effects of immigration in the UK.
    Home Office Online Report, 06/03.
  • Lowenstein, Roger. 2006, July 9. The Immigration
    Equation. The New York Times Magazine 36-43
    69-71.
  • Marr, William L., and Michael B. Percy. 1985.
    Immigration policy and Canadian economic
    growth. in John Walley, ed., Domestic Policies
    and the International Economic Environment,
    Studies of the Royal Commission on the Economic
    Union and Development Prospects for Canada, vol.
    12 (Toronto University of Toronto Press).
  • Introduction to Economic and Urban Issues in
    Canadian Immigration Policy by Hugh Grant
    Arthur Sweetman, Canadian Journal of Urban
    Research, 13(1)1-24.
  • The Deteriorating Economic Welfare of Immigrants
    and Possible Causes Update 2005" by Garnet Picot
    Arthur Sweetman, Statistics Canada Analytical
    Studies Branch research paper series, No. 262.
  • Chronic Low Income and Low-income Dynamics Among
    Recent Immigrants by Garnett Picot, Feng Hou and
    Simon Coulombe, Statistics Canada Analytical
    Studies Branch research paper series, No. 294.
  • Smith, James P. and Barry Edmonston. 1997. The
    New Americans Economic, Demographic, and Fiscal
    Effects of Immigration, Washington, D.C.
    National Academy Press.
  • Swan, Neil, et al. 1991. Economic and social
    impacts of immigration a research report.
    Ottawa Economic Council of Canada (Supply and
    Services Canada).
  • Sweetman, Arthur. 2005. Canada Immigration as a
    Labour Market Strategy (broad overview)
    http//www.migpolgroup.com/infopages/2548.html
  • (UK) HOUSE OF LORDS, Select Committee on Economic
    Affairs, 1st Report of Session 200708, 2008. The
    Economic Impact of Immigration.
  • Warman, Casey and Christopher Worswick. 2004.
    Immigrant Earnings Performance in Canadian
    Cities 1981 through 2001 Canadian Journal of
    Urban Research 13(1) 62-84.
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