Selection Criteria and the Skill Composition of Immigrants: A Comparative Analysis of Australian and U.S. Employment Immigration

42 Pages Posted: 7 Jul 2008

See all articles by Guillermina Jasso

Guillermina Jasso

New York University (NYU) - Department of Sociology; IZA Institute of Labor Economics

Mark R. Rosenzweig

Yale University - Economic Growth Center; Yale University - Cowles Foundation

Abstract

This paper uses survey data on employment immigrants in Australia and the United States to identify the main determinants of the size and skill composition of employment immigrants to developed countries. Our approach emphasizes the key roles of world prices of skills and country proximity. Our empirical results are consistent with the view that these factors, rather than the nuances of selection systems, dominate. There are five main findings: (1) Higher skill prices in sending countries decrease the number of immigrants but increase their average schooling. (2) More-distant countries send fewer but more skilled immigrants. (3) Given skill prices and proximity, countries with higher income send more immigrants, of lower skill. (4) Within a sending country, Australia attracts less total but higher-skill migrants than does the United States. This can be attributed, however, to the fact that the skill price in Australia is lower than the U.S. skill price, so that immigration gains are greater from immigrating to United States. (5) The estimated coefficients determining migration flows to Australia and the United States are the same for both countries. We conclude that geography thus matters in the sense that who a country's neighbors are, in terms of their level and type of development, has a significant effect on the size and skill composition of employment migrants. There is no evidence that the differences in the selection mechanism used to screen employment migrants in the two countries play a significant role in affecting the characteristics of skill migration.

Keywords: highly skilled immigration, immigration policy, immigrant selection criteria, skill prices, country proximity, globalization, employment immigration

JEL Classification: F22, J31, J61, J68, O15

Suggested Citation

Jasso, Guillermina and Rosenzweig, Mark Richard, Selection Criteria and the Skill Composition of Immigrants: A Comparative Analysis of Australian and U.S. Employment Immigration. IZA Discussion Paper No. 3564, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1155838 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1155838

Guillermina Jasso (Contact Author)

New York University (NYU) - Department of Sociology ( email )

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Mark Richard Rosenzweig

Yale University - Economic Growth Center ( email )

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Yale University - Cowles Foundation

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