The Effect of Occupational Visas on Native Employment: Evidence from Labor Supply to Farm Jobs in the Great Recession

44 Pages Posted: 22 Jan 2017 Last revised: 18 Oct 2022

See all articles by Michael A. Clemens

Michael A. Clemens

George Mason University; Peterson Institute for International Economics; IZA-Institute for the Study of Labor; Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration; Center for Global Development

Abstract

The effect of foreign labor on native employment within an occupation depends on native labor supply to that occupation depends on native labor supply to that occupation - which is rarely directly measured - even if native and foreign labor are perfect substitutes in production. This paper uses two natural quasi-experiments to directly compare foreign to native labor supply in manual farm work. The first quasi-experiment is a legal requirement for employers to demand native labor with infinite elasticity at the wage earned by migrants; the second is a large exogenous shock to native workers' reserve option.Together these offer what is essentially a natural audit study in which tens of thousands of 'immigrant jobs' were offered to native workers with a range of exogenously varying terms. It uses novel data on the universe of domestic applicants to tens of thousands of farm jobs in the state of North Carolina over a 15 year period. The wage elasticity of unemployed domestic workers' relative labor supply is 0.0015. This implies that the effect of migrant labor supply on native employment is close to zero within this occupation, and may be positive outside it. Job-specific estimates of this kind are useful alongside more generalized evaluations of immigration because immigration policy often regulates access to specific occupations.

Keywords: Mexico, United States, natural experiment, agriculture, wage, farm, employment, visa, labor-market, displacement, immigration, immigrant

JEL Classification: F22, J61, O15

Suggested Citation

Clemens, Michael Andrew, The Effect of Occupational Visas on Native Employment: Evidence from Labor Supply to Farm Jobs in the Great Recession. IZA Discussion Paper No. 10492, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2903114

Michael Andrew Clemens (Contact Author)

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