Publication | Closed Access
The Impact of Migration on Wages: Empirical Evidence from French Youth*
33
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
Human MigrationGlobal MigrationInternal MigrationLabor MigrationJob Search FrameworkLabor Market IntegrationPublic HealthEconomicsPopulation MigrationLabor EconomicsInternational Population MovementMigration CostsSociologyBusinessMigrant WorkerDemographyEmpirical EvidencePopulation MovementLocal Labor MarketImmigration
Abstract. This paper deals with the impact of migration on wages. We introduce a spatial dimension into the job search framework, so that the agent faces neither the same job offer distribution nor the same search costs when looking for a job inside his local labor market. This is in comparison to the agent searching outside his local labor market, where migration costs are a factor. We estimate wage equations in which we introduce the decision to migrate as a binary choice, and later as a polychotomic choice (stayer/mover from provinces to Paris/mover from provinces to provinces). We find no selection effect for people with low levels of education, and a positive selection effect for highly educated migrants. When we distinguish the migration destination for highly educated from provinces, we find a hierarchical effect, that is, the selection effect is higher for men who migrate to Paris than for those who migrate to other provinces.
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