José Posted March 1, 2007 Report Posted March 1, 2007 Une étude scientifique se basant sur les chiffres de l'emploi et des salaires en Californie ces 40 dernières années montrent que les immigrés n'affectent pas de manière négative les perspectives professionnelles des travailleurs nés aux États-Unis. Au contraire, ces travailleurs immigrés auraient un effet positif sur les salaires du travailleur "indigène" moyen. Toutefois, l'auteur de l'étude a observé que l'arrivée de nouveaux travailleurs immigrés tend à déprimer les salaires des autres immigrés arrivés plus tôt et qui travaillent dans les mêmes secteurs. How Immigrants Affect California Employment and WagesOne of the most contentious issues about immigration is how it affects the wages and employment opportunities of U.S. natives. If immigrants hurt the labor market options of native workers, Californians should feel the most pain. California has a higher share of immigrants in its population and labor force than any other state. The large inflow of documented and undocumented immigrants during recent decades increased the presence of foreign-born individuals in California so much that by 2004, immigrants constituted one-third of the state’s labor force and population. This edition of California Counts analyzes the effect of the immigration inflow on the employment, population, and wages of U.S. natives in California, using the decennial Censuses and American Community Survey data spanning the period 1960–2004. It presents the size, trends, and composition of immigration in California, compares these with national averages, and estimates how native workers’ behavior and wages respond to the inflow of immigrant workers across age and education groups over that period. The major findings could have important implications for the national debate as well as for California: First, there is no evidence that the inflow of immigrants over the period 1960–2004 worsened the employment opportunities of natives with similar education and experience. The study finds no association between the inflow of immigrants and the out-migration of natives within the same education and age group. Summary California Counts Immigrant Effects on California Employment Public Policy Institute of California. Second, according to our calculations, during 1990–2004, immigration induced a 4 percent real wage increase for the average native worker. This effect ranged from near zero (+0.2%) for wages of native high school dropouts and between 3 and 7 percent for native workers with at least a high school diploma. Third, the results indicate that recent immigrants did lower the wages of previous immigrants. Wages of immigrants who entered California before 1990 were 17 to 20 percent lower in 2004 than they would have been absent any immmigration between 1990 and 2004. These findings derive from empirical analyses showing that immigrant workers often serve as complements to native workers rather than as their direct competitors for jobs, thereby increasing total economic output. Native workers benefit because they are able to specialize in more productive work. The results are consistent with other national-level research showing that immigrants have little if any effect on the wages of low-skilled natives and benefit high-skilled natives. http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/cacounts/CC_207GPCC.pdf
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