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This article uses 1990 census data to study the effects of immigrant inflows on occupation-specific labor market outcomes. I find that intercity mobility rates of natives and earlier immigrants are insensitive to immigrant inflows. However, occupation-specific wages and employment rates are systematically lower in cities with higher relative supplies of workers in a given occupation. The results imply that immigrant inflows over the 1980s reduced wages and employment rates of low-skilled natives in traditional gateway cities like Miami and Los Angeles by 1-3 percentage points. Copyright 2001 by University of Chicago Press.
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David Card
Brigham Young University
The Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association
Journal of Labor Economics
University of California, Berkeley
National Bureau of Economic Research
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David Card (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dbba6750e1971baba3c511 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/209979