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Abdurrahman Aydemir, George J. Borjas, Cross-Country Variation in the Impact of International Migration: Canada, Mexico, and the United States, Journal of the European Economic Association, Volume 5, Issue 4, 1 June 2007, Pages 663–708, https://doi.org/10.1162/JEEA.2007.5.4.663
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Abstract
Using data drawn from the Canadian, Mexican, and U.S. censuses, we find a numerically comparable and statistically significant inverse relation between immigrant-induced shifts in labor supply and wages in each of the three countries: A 10% labor supply shift is associated with a 3%–4% opposite-signed change in wages. Despite the similarity in the wage response, the impact of migration on the wage structure differs significantly across countries. International migration narrowed wage inequality in Canada; increased it in the United States; and reduced the relative wage of workers at the bottom of the skill distribution in Mexico.