The Economic Benefits from Immigration
- 1 May 1995
- journal article
- Published by American Economic Association in Journal of Economic Perspectives
- Vol. 9 (2) , 3-22
- https://doi.org/10.1257/jep.9.2.3
Abstract
Natives benefit from immigration mainly because of production complementarities between immigrant workers and other factors of production, and these benefits are larger when immigrants are sufficiently ‘different’ from the stock of native productive inputs. The available evidence suggests that the economic benefits from immigration for the United States are small, on the order of $6 billion and almost certainly less than $20 billion annually. These gains, however, could be increased considerably if the United States pursued an immigration policy that attracted a more skilled immigrant flow.Keywords
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This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Consumer gains from physician immigration to the US: 1966–1971Applied Economics, 1991
- The Resolution of the Labor-Scarcity ParadoxThe Journal of Economic History, 1985