The Impact of New Immigration on Native Wages: A Cross-Occupation Analysis of a Small Open Economy

Heiwai Tang, S. Wong
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Abstract

This paper examines how immigration affects native wages by exploiting an unexpected episode of immigrant influx. The episode happened in Hong Kong, when its government unexpectedly relaxed the restriction on immigration from mainland China in 1993, resulting in a seven-fold increase in the net inflow of Chinese immigrants between 1992 and 1993. We use variation in the employment share of immigrants across occupations for identification. To tackle endogeneity between wages and immigrant inflows across occupations, we use Welch’s (1999) congruence indices, which capture the degree of substitutability between workers from different skill groups, to construct instruments for the prevalence of Chinese immigrants in an occupation. Using micro-level data, our two-stage-least-squares estimates show that a 1 percentage point increase in the ratio of new Chinese immigrants to natives decreases native monthly real wages in the same occupation by 2.8-3.6 percents (controlling for immigrant shocks in similar occupations). Within an occupation, female and more skilled native workers experience more adverse wage impact, reflecting a high switching cost associated with occupation-specific human capital.
新移民对本地工资的影响:一个小型开放经济的跨职业分析
本文考察了移民如何通过利用移民涌入的意外事件影响本地工资。这一幕发生在香港。1993年,香港政府出人意料地放松了对中国内地移民的限制,导致1992年至1993年间中国内地移民的净流入增加了7倍。我们使用移民在不同职业的就业份额的变化来识别。为了解决不同职业的工资和移民流入之间的内禀性,我们使用了Welch(1999)的同余指数,该指数捕捉了来自不同技能群体的工人之间的可替代性程度,并构建了中国移民在某个职业中普遍存在的工具。使用微观层面的数据,我们的两阶段最小二乘估计表明,新中国移民与本地居民的比例每增加1个百分点,同一职业的本地月实际工资就会下降2.8- 3.6%(控制了类似职业的移民冲击)。在一个职业中,女性和更熟练的本土工人经历了更多的不利工资影响,反映了与职业特定人力资本相关的高转换成本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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