Migration, Unemployment, and Skill Downgrading
Joan Muysken,
Ehsan Vallizadeh and
Thomas Ziesemer ()
Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 2015, vol. 117, issue 2, 403-451
Abstract:
In this paper, we analyze the labor market impacts of immigration under flexible and rigid labor market regimes. A general equilibrium framework is developed, accounting for skill heterogeneity and labor market frictions, where unemployed medium-skilled manufacturing workers are downgraded into low-skilled service jobs, while low-skilled service workers might end up unemployed. The analytical analysis shows that medium-skill immigration decreases low-skilled unemployment under the flexible regime, indicating a complementarity effect, while the rigid regime induces a substitution effect, leading to low-skilled unemployment. Moreover, it leads to wage polarization. In a numerical analysis, the economic effects of different migration scenarios are quantified.
Date: 2015
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Related works:
Working Paper: Migration, Unemployment, and Over-qualification: A Specific-Factors Model Approach (2012) 
Working Paper: Migration, Unemployment, and Over-qualification: A Specific Factors-Model Approach (2012) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bla:scandj:v:117:y:2015:i:2:p:403-451
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