Affiliation:
1. Research Economist and Policy Adviser, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta (email: )
2. Principal Economist, Federal Reserve Board, Division of Monetary Affairs (email: )
Abstract
We show that the observed polarization of employment toward the high- and low-skill occupations disappears when only native workers are considered. Instead, low-skilled immigration explains employment growth at the low tail of the skill distribution. Moreover, while employment rose, wages remained subdued in low-skill occupations. A data-disciplined structural model accounts for this evidence: Offshoring and automation negatively affect middle-skill occupations but enhance employment and wages for the high-skilled. Low-skill employment is sheltered from offshoring and automation, as it consists of manual, non-tradable services. However, low-skilled immigration depresses low-skill wages and encourages native workers to move into skilled occupations through training. (JEL F16, J24, J31, J61, M53)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Cited by
12 articles.
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