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The (Non-Parochial) Welfare Economics Of Immigration

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John E. Roemer

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Abstract

We study the effect of immigration on world welfare. The world consists of two areas, South and North, the former populated by low-skill workers, and the latter by both low and high skill workers. A trade union in the North keeps the wage of low-skill workers above the Walrasian wage, generating unemployment of low-skill workers. Citizens fund unemployment benefits through taxation.

Immigration from South to North has two effects: a mixed native-foreign working-class lowers union power, and hence the union mark-up on the Walrasian wage; it also lowers the solidarity of the employed citizens with the unemployed (who now consist in part of non-natives) and thus the unemployment benefit.

We calculate the optimal level of immigration, from the viewpoint of an observer who maximizes world welfare, according to several social welfare functions. The optimal level of immigration for a Rawlsian observer is significantly less than the open-borders equilibrium level.

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Paper provided by California Davis - Department of Economics in its series Department of Economics with number 97-05.

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Handle: RePEc:fth:caldec:97-05

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Postal: University of California Davis - Department of Economics. One Shields Ave., California 95616-8578
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  1. Jennifer Hunt, 2004. "Are Migrants More Skilled than Non-Migrants? Repeat, Return and Same-Employer Migrants," NBER Working Papers 10633, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
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This page was last updated on 2009-11-13.


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