Contents -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. EMPIRICAL FRAMEWORK -- III. DATA AND EVIDENCE -- IV. RESULTS AND INTERPRETATION -- V. IMPLICATIONS OF THE RESULTS -- VI. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES
Summary
This paper empirically examines the effect on wages in Mexico of Mexican emigration to the United States, using data from the Mexican and United States censuses from 1970-2000. The main result in the paper is that emigration has a strong and positive effect on Mexican wages. There is also evidence for increasing wage inequality in Mexico due to emigration. Simple welfare calculations based on a labor demand-supply framework suggest that the aggregate welfare loss to Mexico due to emigration is small. However, there is a significant distributional impact between labor and other factors
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references
Notes
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English
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