The economic consequences of immigration. 1987

G J Borjas, and M Tienda

Available research supports several major conclusions about the economic consequences of immigration. (i) The aggregate impacts of foreign workers on the earnings and employment of native workers are quite small, but differ for selected population subgroups and high ethnic density labor markets. (ii) Immigrants who arrived during the 1970s are less skilled than earlier arrivals, and their earnings will remain substantially below those of natives throughout their working lives. (iii) The evidence on immigrants' receipt of public assistance income is inconclusive.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

G J Borjas, and M Tienda
July 1962, Annales medico-psychologiques,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
April 2004, Journal of immigrant health,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
December 1989, International migration (Geneva, Switzerland),
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
January 1984, International migration (Geneva, Switzerland),
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
January 1984, The International migration review,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
December 2017, Journal of economic literature,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
October 2017, JAMA internal medicine,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
January 2008, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
December 2004, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences,
G J Borjas, and M Tienda
January 1979, Hommes & migrations,
Copied contents to your clipboard!