Title: Political Economy of Immigration Policy: Lecture 6
1Political Economy of Immigration PolicyLecture 6
- Gordon H. Hanson
- UCSD and NBER
2Introduction
- What weve done so far
- Scale, selection and sorting in international
migration - Labor markets impacts of emigration and
immigration - Public finances and international labor flows
- Illegal migration
- Final lecture
- Political economy of immigration policy
- Why do receiving countries restrict labor inflows?
3Immigration Policy Regimes
- Governance of immigration policy
- Regulation of entry
- By quantity (quota on visas) or price (entry fee)
- By ex ante or ex post selection criterion
- Scope of residency rights
- Broad (path to citizenship) or narrow (temporary
admission) - Immigration policy regimes
- Legal immigration
- Combination of quantity regulation (quotas), ex
ante selection criteria (family, skills,
asylees), broad residency rights - Illegal immigrants
- Combination of price regulation (implicit entry
fee), ex post criterion (behavior), minimal
residency rights
4Political Economy of Immigration Policy
- Why do countries restrict labor inflows?
- Protect income of median voter or specific
factors - Benhabib, de Melo et al
- Facchini and Willmann, Scheve Slaughter, Hanson
Spilimbergo, Mayda, Facchini and Mayda - Address distortions due to welfare state
- Wellisch Walz, Sinn et al, Boeri and Brücker,
Facchini Mayda, Hanson, Scheve Slaughter - Scholten Thum, Razin Sadka, Poutvaara
- Preserve cultural or ethnic homogeneity
- Huntington, Dustmann and Preston
5Design of Immigration Policy Regimes
- Actual policy regimes have at least three
dimensions - (1) entry regulation, (2) selection criterion,
(3) scope of residency rights - Basic tensions in policy design
- National welfare gain from free immigration vs.
loss in income of favored groups (focus of
literature to date) - Providing incentive to assimilate versus
obtaining information on the desirability of an
immigrant - Do bilateral migration treaties address these
issues?
6Why are poor consigned to illegal migration?
- Whom do rich countries admit as legal immigrants?
- Where do rich countries govern entry through
quantity regulation, ex ante selection, broad
rights? - Use for immigrants whose type (eg, skill, family)
is observable - Ex ante screen broad rights strong incentive
to assimilate - Whom do rich countries admit as illegal
immigrants? - Where do rich countries govern entry thru price
regulation, ex post selection, narrow residency
rts? - Use where type (eg, motivation) is unobservable
- Mix of entry price, ex post screen, narrow rights
selects desirable types (but reduces incentive to
assimilate) - Narrow rights also lower fiscal cost, softening
opposition
7Trade versus immigration policy
- Many countries appear to have adopted relatively
liberal trade policies but relatively illiberal
immigration policies - This pattern is replicated in public opinion data
with support for liberal trade policies being
stronger than support for liberal immigration - Why does freer immigration seem to be less
politically palatable that freer trade?
8Some Answers
- Non-economic concerns such as attitudes toward
foreign cultures and minority groups are more
influential for immigration than trade - Pat Buchanan, Samuel Huntington (2005)
-
- Economic concerns about immigration and trade
differ and may favor trade over immigration as a
strategy for international economic integration
9Foreign-born share of the US population is rising
Immigrants in the US, Number and Share of
Population
Millions
Percent of Population
Year
10Education levels of US immigrants, natives
11Concerns about immigration
- In the US, immigrants are concentrated at the
extremes of the skill distribution - Strongly over-represented among the least
educated - Moderately over-represented among the most
educated - Economic consequences of immigration
- Changes relative supplies of labor
- Expands US tax base, increases demands on public
services - Expands cross-border flows of ideas, capital,
trade - Are consequences of immigration reflected in
individual attitudes toward immigration policy?
12The argument
- In the absence of distortionary tax and spending
policies, free immigration and free trade would
often be supported by similar groups thanks to
similar labor-market effects - Either tends to depress relative wages for
low-skilled US natives - Borjas, Freeman Katz (1997), Feenstra Hanson
(1999), Scheve Slaughter (2001), Borjas (2003),
Mayda (2004), Card (2005) - However, government policies that redistribute
income alter the distributional consequences (and
so the politics) of globalization - Immigrants pay taxes, use public services, and
vote imports do none of these things - The net fiscal impact of immigration appears
negative (at least in short run), especially in
high-immigration states and for high-income
citizens who pay most of the tax bill for public
services to immigrants - Smith et al. (1997) 200 net transfer per HH in
US, 1200 in CA - Smaller fiscal effects are expected as a result
of international trade
13Views on fiscal consequences of immigration
- "California's addiction to 'cheap' illegal alien
labor is bankrupting the state and posing huge
burdens on the state's middle class tax base."
Dan Stein, Federation for American
Immigration Reform - It uses tax dollars to provide illegal workers
with educational services, medical care, and
unemployment compensation for those that are
injured on the job. They are a drain on the
taxpayers of Canyon County, the state of Idaho,
and the US in general. Robert Vasquez,
Commissioner of Canyon County, Idaho - "The bottom line is that businesses are
benefiting from the cheap illegal labor. They're
making extra profits and they're shifting the
whole benefits package over on to the
taxpayer. Rick Oltman, Yuma County,
Arizona - Federal immigration policies should ensure that
new immigrants do not become a public charge to
federal, state, or local governments.
National Governors Association
14A tale of two governors
- In the 1990s, California and Texas both had
Republican governors - Governors Bush and Wilson were fiscal
conservatives and rising stars within the
national Republican party - Both supported NAFTA and free trade, but took
very different approaches toward immigration - Bush courted the Latino vote (even campaigning in
Spanish) and tried to appear pro-immigration - Wilson endorsed Proposition 187, a ballot measure
to deny access of illegal immigrants to public
services in California (later blocked by the
courts)
15A tale of two governors
- What accounts for these different approaches
toward immigration? - California provides generous public benefits to
immigrants financed by progressive income taxes -
- This may have given high-income voters in the
state an incentive to join the anti-immigration
coalition - Texas provides meager public benefits financed by
a regressive state sales tax - This may have made high-income voters in the
state more pro-immigrant and created political
space to attract socially conservative Latino
immigrants to the Republican party
16A simple model of policy preferences
- Let V(p, Ii) be indirect utility received by
individual i, as a function of commodity prices,
p, and after-tax income, Ii - Consider change in indirect utility due to
immigration - Expressed in monetary terms this is
- Immigration changes commodity prices (1st term),
pre-tax income (2nd term), and net fiscal
transfer (3rd term)
17Welfare effects of immigration
- Let V(p, yi) be indirect utility received by
individual i, as a function of commodity prices,
p, and income, yi - Change in aggregate welfare due to change in low
skilled labor supply of dL is (where ai is share
of group i in the pop. for two groups, skilled
(H) and unskilled (L)) - If marginal utility of income (?) is constant
across people - where
18Welfare effects of immigration
- Change in welfare as share of GNP (Y) is
- where is the elasticity of income for
factor type i w.r.t. the supply of low skilled
labor, ?i is the share of factor i in GNP, and M
is inflow of L - y is post-tax income, given by
- where wi is the pre-tax wage for group i, ti is
the tax rate for group i and gi are govt
transfers for group i
19Welfare effects of immigration
- How does post tax income respond to immigration?
- Elasticity of post tax income w.r.t. supply of
factor i is - where ?v,I is share of income type v for factor i
and ?v,iL is the elasticity of income type v
w.r.t. the supply of low skilled labor for factor
i - We expect
- ?w,LL lt 0, ?w,HL gt 0 (immigration of L raises wH
and lowers wL) - ?t,LL gt 0, ?t,HL gt 0 (immigration of L raises
tax rates) - ?g,LL lt 0, ?g,HL gt 0 (immigration of L lowers
govt transfers) -
20Estimating equation
- Assume pre-tax income and the net fiscal transfer
are linear functions of individual
characteristics - (where X is defined such that ßgt0)
- Assume ?ß/?M?, in which case we expect
- With low-skilled immigration
- ?yi/?MXi??ei/?M gt 0 for high-skilled labor
- ?yi/?MXi??ei/?M lt 0 for low-skilled labor
- Assume ??/?M?
- ? will vary across US states according to their
spending and tax policies and the size of their
immigrant populations
21Estimating equation
- Putting this together, we obtain
- Preferences on immigration policy depend on
individual characteristics, state
characteristics, and their interactions (use
categorical variables to allow for
non-linearities) - All else equal,
- Overall, the low-skilled will be more opposed to
immigration (than the high-skilled) and their
opposition will be stronger in states with larger
immigrant populations - The opposition of the high-skilled to immigration
will be stronger in states that (a) make larger
fiscal transfers to immigrants, or (b) have
more-skilled immigrant populations - Policies that weaken redistribution will also
weaken high-skilled opposition to immigration
22Identification
- Empirical estimation
- We estimate the correlation between opposition to
immigration (or trade) and schooling and how this
varies with size of state immigrant population,
skill mix of state immigrant population, and
state fiscal exposure to immigration - Given controls for state fixed effects, our focus
is on how slope coefficient on schooling varies
across states identification is based on
cross-state variation in how opposition to
immigration responds to schooling (and whether
this is conditional on the fiscal regime of the
state)
23Identification
- Estimation issues (and partial corrections)
- Endogeneity of state of residence, state welfare
policies - Issue is possible correlation between unobserved
determinants of individual attitudes toward
immigration and size of state immigrant
population (or nature of state welfare policies) - Would likely cause us to understate cross-state
variation in opposition to immigration (since
those more opposed to immigration or to generous
welfare policies would be more likely to settle
in low-immigration, low-welfare states) - Over sample period, few individuals change states
and ranking of states in terms of welfare
generosity to immigrants is stable issue may be
ameliorated by controlling for state fixed
effects - Measurement error in preferences (Bertrand
Mullainathan) - Issue is that measurement error in stated
preferences may be correlated with individual
characteristics (eg, education) - Exploit information on other opinions (including
those seemingly irrelevant to immigration) to
absorb idiosyncratic error terms
24Data
- Examine public opinion across US states, for
which there there is variation in fiscal costs of
immigration - Define US states as tax jurisdiction (states set
income, sales, and property taxes, provide many
public benefits) - Sources
- National Election Studies Surveys, 1992 and 2000
- Census of Population and Housing, Census of
Governments, CPS
25Immigrants are geographically concentrated
26But recent immigrants follow job growth
27Fiscal costs of immigration vary by state
28Since 1996, immigrant-native differences in
welfare use have declined for all categories
except Medicaid
29Differences remain in welfare uptake across US
states ( of households receiving
assistance by type)
A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates A. Overall Welfare Participation Rates B. Cash Program Participation Rates B. Cash Program Participation Rates B. Cash Program Participation Rates B. Cash Program Participation Rates
 Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State
 Less Less More Less Less More Less More Less More
 Natives Natives Natives Immigrants Immigrants Immigrants Natives Natives Immigrants Immigrants
1994 16.7 16.7 13.9 22.8 22.8 25.2 7.7 7.6 8.2 14.3
1998 13.9 13.9 12.6 16.9 16.9 21.9 5.7 6.0 5.6 10.5
2002 16.0 16.0 13.7 20.7 20.7 25.5 4.9 4.9 3.4 8.3
C. Medicaid Participation Rates C. Medicaid Participation Rates C. Medicaid Participation Rates C. Medicaid Participation Rates C. Medicaid Participation Rates C. Medicaid Participation Rates C. Medicaid Participation Rates D. Food Stamp Participation Rates D. Food Stamp Participation Rates D. Food Stamp Participation Rates D. Food Stamp Participation Rates
 Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State Welfare Generosity of State
 Less Less More Less Less More Less More Less More
 Natives Natives Natives Immigrants Immigrants Immigrants Natives Natives Immigrants Immigrants
1994 14.1 14.1 12.4 18.6 18.6 23.6 9.6 7.3 14.2 13.6
1998 12.2 12.2 11.6 15.4 15.4 20.7 6.4 5.2 5.7 9.1
2002 14.5 14.5 12.8 19.4 19.4 24.7 6.3 4.6 5.8 6.8
30Percent of school children with immigrant
mothers, 2000
31Expenditures and revenues by foreign-born and
native households in California (1996)
32State generosity in welfare benefits
     Â
 4 IL MO, NE CA, MA, MD, ME, RI WA
3 FL OR CT, MN, NJ, NY, PA, WI HI
Public Assistance Availability to Immigrants 2 DC, DE, KY, MT, NV, NC, TN, VA, WY AK, AZ, CO, GA, IA, KA, NM, ND, UT MI NH
 1 AL, AR, ID, LA, MS, OH, TX, WV IN, OK, SC, SD  Â
  1 2 3 4
  Public Assistance Generosity Public Assistance Generosity Public Assistance Generosity Public Assistance Generosity
33Ranking of US states in terms of generosity
toward immigrants is stable over time
34Data
- Measuring fiscal exposure to immigration (start
with 4 categories per measure, test down to 2) - Immigration fiscal exposure measures
- Fiscal Exposure 1 Equal to 1 if state welfare
spending per native is above 90 national mean
and if high-immigration state (immigration
population share is above 90 national mean), 0
o/w - Fiscal Exposure 2 Equal to 1 if ratio of state
immigrant HHs on welfare to number of native HHs
above 90 national mean, 0 o/w - Other fiscal exposure measures (for trade policy
analysis) - Fiscal Exposure 3 Equal to 1 if state welfare
spending per native is above 90 national mean - Fiscal Exposure 4 Equal to 1 if state welfare
spending as share of state GDP is above 90
national mean - Interactions with schooling (No High School, High
School, Some College, College) or income quartile
35High immigration and generous welfare states
- High immigration states
- 1992 AZ, CA, CT, FL, IL, MA, NJ, NY, TX
- 2000 92 states plus CO, DC, MD, NV, NM, OR,
VA, WA - States with high immigrant uptake of welfare
- 1992 CA, CT, FL, MA, NJ, NY
- 2000 92 states plus WA
- States with high welfare spending
- Per native household
- 1992 CA, CT, NH, IL, LA, MD, MA, MI, MN, NJ,
NY, OH, PA, TN, WA, WV, WI - 2000 CA, CT, DC, IL, KY, ME, MD, MA, MN, MS,
NH, NJ, NM, NY, ND, OR, PA, SC, TN, WA, WV - As share of state GDP
- 1992 AZ, AK, CA, CT, LA, MA, MI, MN, NH, NJ,
NY, OH, PA, TN, WV, WI - 2000 AL, AK, CA, IA, KY, LA, ME, MA, MN, MS,
NM, NY, ND, OH, OR, PA, SC, TN, WV
36Data
- NES immigration policy question
- Do you think the number of immigrants from
foreign countries who are permitted to come to
the US to live should be increased a little,
increased a lot, decreased a little, decreased a
lot, or left the same as it is now? - Immigration Opinion is coded a 1 for those
individuals favoring immigration be decreased a
little or a lot and 0 for those individuals
favoring immigration be maintained or increased.
37Data
- NES trade policy question
- Some people have suggested placing new limits on
foreign imports in order to protect American
jobs. Others say that such limits would raise
consumer prices and hurt American exports. Do
you favor or oppose placing new limits on
imports, or haven't you thought much about this? - Trade Opinion is coded a 1 for those individuals
favoring protection and 0 for those opposing it
38Native support for decreased immigration by
education and fiscal exposure to immigrants, 2000
Fiscal Exposure Measure Fiscal Exposure No High School High School Some College College Grad
Fiscal Exposure 1 Low 0.537 0.571 0.507 0.362
High 0.625 0.558 0.461 0.420
Fiscal Exposure 2 Low 0.498 0.572 0.516 0.361
 High 0.658 0.557 0.464 0.435
39Native support for trade restrictions by
education and fiscal exposure to immigrants, 2000
Fiscal Exposure Measure Fiscal Exposure No High School High School Some College College Grad
Fiscal Exposure 1 Low 0.748 0.719 0.590 0.383
High 0.662 0.674 0.560 0.418
Fiscal Exposure 2 Low 0.728 0.719 0.606 0.392
 High 0.707 0.674 0.548 0.397
40Probit results on native opposition to immigration
- Estimation
- Sample is native respondents
- Regressors
- Dummies for schooling category alone and
interacted with size of state immigrant
population, state fiscal exposure to immigration - Other controls gender, quadratic in age, race,
ethnicity, state unemployment rate, state dummy
variables, year dummy variable - Additional controls Isolationist sentiment,
union membership, public sector employment,
partisanship, ideology - Standard errors clustered by state
41Table 2 Fiscal Exposure 1 Fiscal Exposure 1 Fiscal Exposure 2 Fiscal Exposure 2
High School 0.182 0.168 0.211 0.206
(0.101) (0.107) (0.095) (0.103)
Some College 0.047 0.027 0.102 0.092
(0.097) (0.098) (0.100) (0.104)
College -0.347 -0.356 -0.298 -0.295
(0.119) (0.130) (0.116) (0.127)
No High School Immigration 0.445 0.474 0.365 0.667
(0.141) (0.173) (0.257) (0.270)
High School Immigration -0.016 0.034 -0.012 0.248
(0.117) (0.136) (0.122) (0.140)
Some College Immigration -0.098 -0.033 -0.143 0.116
(0.094) (0.097) (0.088) (0.151)
College Immigration -0.078 -0.016 -0.183 0.043
(0.111) (0.128) (0.115) (0.165)
No High School Fiscal Exposure -0.090 0.246 0.102 0.189
(0.200) (0.169) (0.264) (0.259)
High School Fiscal Exposure -0.008 0.303 -0.011 0.144
(0.141) (0.130) (0.137) (0.136)
Some College Fiscal Exposure -0.036 0.237 -0.003 0.138
(0.089) (0.109) (0.082) (0.110)
College Fiscal Exposure 0.219 0.490 0.347 0.526
(0.118) (0.145) (0.127) (0.117)
State Fixed Effects No Yes No Yes
42Impact of education on attitude toward
immigration (Facchini Mayda, 2006)
43Impact of income on attitude toward immigration
(Facchini Mayda, 2006)
44Trade policy preferences
Fiscal Exposure Measure Fiscal Exposure Measure Fiscal Exposure Measure Fiscal Exposure Measure
Table 5 1 2 3 4
High School -0.111 -0.020 -0.074 -0.033
(0.121) (0.123) (0.151) (0.161)
Some College -0.390 -0.267 -0.268 -0.263
(0.133) (0.146) (0.138) (0.143)
College -0.971 -0.849 -0.908 -0.946
(0.132) (0.128) (0.163) (0.143)
No High School Fiscal Exposure -0.367 0.232 0.004 0.245
(0.264) (0.360) (0.306) (0.275)
High School Fiscal Exposure -0.228 0.132 -0.021 0.160
(0.132) (0.196) (0.238) (0.189)
Some College Fiscal Exposure -0.221 0.111 -0.173 0.064
(0.148) (0.188) (0.236) (0.179)
College Fiscal Exposure -0.046 0.223 0.045 0.376
(0.161) (0.193) (0.259) (0.164)
45Additional results
- Results are robust to
- Including interactions between education and
skill mix of state-immigrant population (measured
continuously or discretely) - Including state share of Latinos in immigrant
population, individual attitudes toward
minorities, other individual opinions - Substituting schooling with reported income,
measured by quartile - Dropping individual high-immigration states (CA,
NY, FL, TX, IL, NJ) - Dropping those who self identify as very
conservative or very liberal - Using continuous measures of immigrant
population, fiscal exposure - Re-estimating using ordered probit instead of
bivariate probit
46Summary
- Puzzle of why we tend to see free trade but
restrictionist immigration policy is usually
posed as if their distributional politics are the
same - While this may be true before taxes, transfers,
it is unlikely to be true after taxes, transfers - The distributional consequences and thus politics
of immigration and trade appear to differ