Industrial and Labor Relations Review
Volume 65, Issue 2, 2012, Pages 377-397

Immigrants and the dynamics of high-wage jobs (Review)

Skuterud M.* , Su M.
  • a Department of Economics, University of Waterloo, ON, Canada
  • b School of Public Finance and Taxation, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, Chengdu, Sichuan, China

Abstract

The authors exploit immigrant identifiers in the Canadian Labour Force Survey (LFS) and the longitudinal dimension of these data to compare the labor force and job dynamics of immigrants and nativeborn workers. They examine the role of job, as opposed to worker, heterogeneity in driving immigrant wage disparities and investigate how the paths into and out of jobs of varying quality compare between immigrant and native-born workers. They find that the disparity in immigrant job quality, which does not appear to diminish with years since arrival, reflects a combination of relatively low transitions into high-wage jobs and high transitions out of these jobs. The former result appears to be due equally to difficulties obtaining highwage jobs directly out of unemployment and to using low-wage jobs as stepping-stones. The authors find little or no evidence, however, that immigrant job seekers face barriers to low-wage jobs. © by Cornell University.

Author Keywords

Immigrant workers Labor force dynamics unemployment

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84862839017&doi=10.1177%2f001979391206500208&partnerID=40&md5=37f4c54fb7273c87d22c4e806446b631

DOI: 10.1177/001979391206500208
ISSN: 00197939
Cited by: 9
Original Language: English