Should the U.S. Have Locked the Heaven's Door? Reassessing the Benefits of the Postwar Immigration

  • Chojnicki X
  • Docquier F
  • Ragot L
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Abstract

This paper examines the economic impact of the second great immigration wave (1945-2000) on the US economy. Contrary to recent studies, we estimate that immigration induced important net gains and small redistributive effects among natives. Our analysis relies on a computable general equilibrium model combining the major interactions between immigrants and natives (labor market impact, fiscal impact, capital deepening, endogenous education, endogenous inequality). We use a backsolving method to calibrate the model on historical data and then consider two counterfactual variants: a cutoff of all immigration flows since 1950 and a stronger selection policy. According to our simulations, the postwar US immigration is beneficial for all cohorts and all skill groups. These gains are closely related to a long-run fiscal gain and a small labor market impact of immigrants. Finally, we also demonstrate that all generations would have benefited from a stronger selection of immigrants.

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Chojnicki, X., Docquier, F., & Ragot, L. (2021). Should the U.S. Have Locked the Heaven’s Door? Reassessing the Benefits of the Postwar Immigration. SSRN Electronic Journal. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.769704

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