On Labor Complementarity, Cultural Frictions and Strategic Immigration Policies


Autoria(s): Fujita, Masahisa; Weber, Shlomo
Data(s)

27/10/2006

27/10/2006

01/09/2004

Resumo

In this paper we consider a model with two industrialized countries that face a flow of immigration from the "rest of the world." The countries differ in three characteristics: the labor complementarity between the "native" population and immigrants, the population size, and the magnitude of the cultural friction between the natives and immigrants. We consider a non-cooperative game between two countries' when their strategic instrument is the choice of an immigration quota and the world immigrant wages introduce the spill-over effect between two countries. We first show that the quota game admits unique pure strategies Nash equilibrium. We then compare the equilibrium choices of two countries and show that even though the larger country attracts more immigrants, it chooses lower quota than its smaller counterpart. It also turns out that higher degree of labor complementarity between natives and immigrants and a lower degree of cultural friction between two groups yield higher immigration quota. We also examine the welfare implications of countries choices' and argue that coordinated and harmonized immigration policies may improve the welfare of both countries.

Formato

330243 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

IDE Discussion Paper. No. 8. 2004.9

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/198

IDE Discussion Paper

8

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #Intra-Country Heterogeneity #Labor Complementarity #Immigration Quota #Policy Harmonization #Alien labor #Labor economics #Migrant labor #Migration #外国人労働者 #労働経済 #移住 #366.89 #G World,others #C72 - Noncooperative Games #F22 - International Migration #O3 - Technological Change; Research and Development #R1 - General Regional Economics #331.6
Tipo

Working Paper

Technical Report