Patrick Szurkowski, University of Pittsburgh
This event is part of the Economics Seminar Series series.
Location:
Gerri C. LeBow Hall722
3220 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Patrick will present his paper Immigration, job sorting, and health: Evidence from 1920s US immigration policy.
Abstract
This project examines how an exogenous decline in immigration flows induces sorting across the distribution of health conditions in the local labor market adjustment process and documents significant changes in the community health indicators. In the 1920s, a set of immigration laws in the United States imposed quotas based on national origin and restricted immigrant flows. These policies cut immigration flows from constrained countries to around 150,000 individuals a year. The effects of this policy change are identified in a difference-in-difference framework utilizing the LIFEM, historical labor survey, and full count census data. Results indicate that individuals in areas facing larger declines in immigration are observed transitioning into occupations and industries with worse associated health measures. Increasing native-born employment in high health cost (HHC) positions offset lost immigrant labor leading to no change in HHC employment share. Further, policy exposure was associated with declining average lifespan and increasing mortality rates among counties’ working age US-born population.