First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions

Abstract Using individual-level Current Population Survey (CPS) data matched across adjacent months from 1996 to 2013, this paper examines immigrant-native differentials in labor market transitions to changes in the business cycle. The paper captures economic fluctuations by measuring deviations in...

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Main Author: Huanan Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-10-01
Series:IZA Journal of Development and Migration
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-018-0127-5
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spelling doaj-8066d7deaa6146029329be040134770d2021-05-02T08:29:05ZengSciendoIZA Journal of Development and Migration2520-17862018-10-018113610.1186/s40176-018-0127-5First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitionsHuanan Xu0Judd Leighton School of Business and Economics, Indiana University South BendAbstract Using individual-level Current Population Survey (CPS) data matched across adjacent months from 1996 to 2013, this paper examines immigrant-native differentials in labor market transitions to changes in the business cycle. The paper captures economic fluctuations by measuring deviations in local demand from national economic circumstances and examines monthly transitions among employment, unemployment, and nonparticipation. Immigrants are found to be first fired and first hired over the business cycle, and the aggregate unemployment gap is caused by immigrants’ higher rates in the unemployment entry flow. Although to some extent the gap can be explained by variation in the immigrant-native’s exposure to cycles across industry and occupation, the first fired and first hired pattern still holds. Tests for heterogeneity show that low-skilled immigrants are more vulnerable to the business cycle. Tests of the structural changes from the 2007–2009 Great Recession show that since its start, there was a secular shift in the transition probabilities that would affect all workers negatively, but cyclical volatility was mitigated for immigrants in the post-Great Recession period. JEL Classification: J15, J21, J23, J61, J63, J64http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-018-0127-5Labor market transitionsLabor force dynamicsUnemploymentBusiness cycleImmigrant workers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Huanan Xu
spellingShingle Huanan Xu
First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
IZA Journal of Development and Migration
Labor market transitions
Labor force dynamics
Unemployment
Business cycle
Immigrant workers
author_facet Huanan Xu
author_sort Huanan Xu
title First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
title_short First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
title_full First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
title_fullStr First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
title_full_unstemmed First fired, first hired? Business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
title_sort first fired, first hired? business cycles and immigrant labor market transitions
publisher Sciendo
series IZA Journal of Development and Migration
issn 2520-1786
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Abstract Using individual-level Current Population Survey (CPS) data matched across adjacent months from 1996 to 2013, this paper examines immigrant-native differentials in labor market transitions to changes in the business cycle. The paper captures economic fluctuations by measuring deviations in local demand from national economic circumstances and examines monthly transitions among employment, unemployment, and nonparticipation. Immigrants are found to be first fired and first hired over the business cycle, and the aggregate unemployment gap is caused by immigrants’ higher rates in the unemployment entry flow. Although to some extent the gap can be explained by variation in the immigrant-native’s exposure to cycles across industry and occupation, the first fired and first hired pattern still holds. Tests for heterogeneity show that low-skilled immigrants are more vulnerable to the business cycle. Tests of the structural changes from the 2007–2009 Great Recession show that since its start, there was a secular shift in the transition probabilities that would affect all workers negatively, but cyclical volatility was mitigated for immigrants in the post-Great Recession period. JEL Classification: J15, J21, J23, J61, J63, J64
topic Labor market transitions
Labor force dynamics
Unemployment
Business cycle
Immigrant workers
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-018-0127-5
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