This paper demonstrates that low-skilled Mexican-born immigrants' location choices respond strongly to changes in local labor demand, which helps equalize spatial differences in employment outcomes for low-skilled native workers. We leverage the substantial geographic variation in labor demand during the Great Recession to identify migration responses to local shocks and find that low- skilled Mexican-born immigrants respond much more strongly than low- skilled natives. Further, Mexican mobility reduced the incidence of local demand shocks on natives, such that those living in metro areas with a substantial Mexican-born population experienced a roughly 50 percent weaker relationship between local shocks and local employment probabilities.
CITATION STYLE
Cadena, B. C., & Kovak, B. K. (2016). Immigrants equilibrate local labor markets: Evidence from the great recession. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 8(1), 257–290. https://doi.org/10.1257/app.20140095
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