给我你的有线和高技能:衡量移民政策对雇主和股东的影响

Carl Lin
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引用次数: 142

摘要

本文将金融理论与移民和移民政策背景下的劳动经济学和政治经济学联系起来。大多数关于移民影响的研究都集中在通过工资、收入和就业来衡量对雇员的影响。人们对其对雇主的影响知之甚少。关于移民对雇主利润的定量影响,以及哪些雇主最有可能因移民而获得(遭受)利润增加(减少)的基本问题,我们缺乏答案。通过事件研究分析,我衡量了移民政策对雇主和股东利润的影响,特别是在那些对技术移民有高需求的行业。1998年的《美国竞争力和劳动力改善法案》(ACWIA)在1999财政年度使外籍技术工人的H-1B签证数量几乎翻了一番。这是美国政府自1990年以来首次提高H-1B签证的年度上限。我关注这个法案,分析它的通过是否以及通过多少增加了股东的利润。实证结果表明,随着1998年ACWIA的通过,H-1B签证使用行业的雇主和股东获得了显著的正回报。“计算机及相关设备”和“计算机及数据处理服务”等高科技行业(H-1B签证的最大用户,占总数的80%)的股东在法案通过后的一个月内累计超额回报分别平均增长21.54%(加权15.88)和22.77%(加权18.11),而不需要H-1B签证的行业累计超额回报没有明显变化。稳健性检验包括国际因素比较,半参数建模和样本分裂Chow结构断裂检验支持结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Give Me Your Wired and Your Highly Skilled: Measuring the Impact of Immigration Policy on Employers and Shareholders
The paper links finance theory to labor economics and political economy in the context of migration and immigration policy. Most research treating the impact of immigration has focused on the consequences for employees as measured by wages, earnings, and employment. Less is known about the impact on employers. We lack answers to basic questions concerning the quantitative impact of immigrants on employer profit, and which employers are most likely to gain (suffer) increased (reduced) profits as a result of immigration. Using event study analysis, I measure the impact of immigration policy on the profit of employers and shareholders, particularly in those industries with high needs for skilled immigrants. The American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act (ACWIA) of 1998 nearly doubled the available number of H-1B visas for skilled foreign workers in FY 1999. It was the first time that the U.S. government raised the annual cap of H-1B visa since 1990. I focus on this bill and analyze whether and by how much its passage increased shareholders’ profit. The empirical results show that employers and shareholders in the top H-1B visa user industries enjoyed significant and positive returns with the passage of the ACWIA of 1998. Shareholders in high-tech industries (the top users of H-1B visa, 80% of total) such as "Computers and related equipment", and "Computer and data processing services" gained, respectively, an average 21.54% (15.88 if weighted) and 22.77% (18.11 if weighted) in cumulative excess returns in the month after the Act was passed, while industries with little need for H-1B visas experienced no significant changes in cumulative excess returns. Robustness testing including international factor comparisons, semiparametric modeling and a sample-split Chow structural break test support the results.
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