Labor Market Concerns and Support for Immigration Ingar Haaland 1 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Labor Market Concerns and Support for Immigration Ingar Haaland 1 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Labor Market Concerns and Support for Immigration Ingar Haaland 1 Christopher Roth 2 1 FAIRThe Choice Lab, NHH Norwegian School of Economics 2 Institute on Behavior and Inequality, Bonn February 1, 2019 1 / 36 Motivation Immigration is a


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Labor Market Concerns and Support for Immigration

Ingar Haaland1 Christopher Roth2

1FAIR–The Choice Lab, NHH Norwegian School of Economics 2Institute on Behavior and Inequality, Bonn

February 1, 2019

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Motivation

  • Immigration is a heated topic: voters have very polarized views
  • n immigration policy.
  • Voters are deeply divided in their beliefs about the extent to

which immigration is good or bad for the economy.

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Motivation

Figure: “Immigrants take jobs away from Americans”

57% Oppose immigration 23% Support immigration Percent who agree (GSS data)

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Research question

Are beliefs about the labor market impact of immigration an important causal driver of people’s support for immigration?

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Identification challenges

Identifying the effect of beliefs on policy views is difficult:

  • Reverse causality (e.g., people adjust their beliefs to justify their

policy views).

  • Omitted variable bias (e.g., identity politics).

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Identification challenges

Identifying the effect of beliefs on policy views is difficult:

  • Reverse causality (e.g., people adjust their beliefs to justify their

policy views).

  • Omitted variable bias (e.g., identity politics).

⇒ We need exogenous variation in beliefs to establish causality.

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This paper

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This paper

  • We conduct a pre-registered experiment on a large

representative sample of Americans (N=3,130).

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This paper

  • We conduct a pre-registered experiment on a large

representative sample of Americans (N=3,130).

  • We shift beliefs by exposing treated respondents to research

evidence showing no adverse labor market impact of immigration.

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This paper

  • We conduct a pre-registered experiment on a large

representative sample of Americans (N=3,130).

  • We shift beliefs by exposing treated respondents to research

evidence showing no adverse labor market impact of immigration.

  • We measure immigration preferences using both self-reports and

real online petitions.

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This paper

  • We conduct a pre-registered experiment on a large

representative sample of Americans (N=3,130).

  • We shift beliefs by exposing treated respondents to research

evidence showing no adverse labor market impact of immigration.

  • We measure immigration preferences using both self-reports and

real online petitions.

  • We employ an obfuscated follow-up study to test for persistence

and to mitigate concerns about experimenter demand effects.

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Main results

  • Providing research evidence increases people’s average support

for low-skilled immigration by 0.14 of a standard deviation.

  • This corresponds to one quarter of the gap in policy views between

Democrats and Republicans.

  • Treatment effects strongly depend on pre-treatment beliefs.
  • Changes in attitudes translate into changes in political behavior.
  • Treatment effects persist in the obfuscated follow-up.

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Challenging the consensus

  • We challenge the consensus that labor market concerns are not a

quantitatively important driver of attitudes towards immigration (Hainmueller and Hopkins, 2014).

  • We challenge the consensus that information is not effective in

changing beliefs and policy views.

  • “While perhaps not providing a strict upper bound on the effects of

information on preferences, our results do suggest that most policy preferences are hard to move.” (Kuziemko et al., 2015)

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Outline of talk

Experimental design Main experimental results Obfuscated follow-up: design and results Conclusion

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Outline of talk

Experimental design Main experimental results Obfuscated follow-up: design and results Conclusion

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Pre-analysis plan

  • We submitted a pre-analysis plan to the AEA RCT Registry

before we collected any data.

  • The pre-analysis plan specified the sample size and how the

data would be analyzed.

  • The analysis presented today follows the pre-analysis plan.

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The Mariel boatlift

“The one historical event that has most shaped how economists view immigration” — Clemens (2017)

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The Mariel boatlift: Context

  • Unexpected mass immigration of Cubans to the US.
  • Most of the Cuban immigrants came to Miami, Florida.
  • Increased the low-skilled workforce in Miami by 20 percent.
  • Used by researchers to study the labor market impact of

immigration.

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Beliefs about labor market impacts I

In the five-year period after 1980, how do you think wages of low-skilled [high-skilled] workers in Miami were affected by the mass immigration of Cubans?

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Beliefs about labor market impacts II

In the five-year period after 1980, how do you think unemployment among low-skilled [high-skilled] workers in Miami was affected by the mass immigration of Cubans?

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Information treatment

Figure: Screen shown to respondents in the treatment group

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Self-reported outcomes

Immigrants to the US differ in terms of their professional skill levels as well as their familiarity with American values and traditions. Do you think the US should allow more or less low-skilled [high-skilled] immigrants that are highly familiar [not familiar] with American values and traditions to come and live here?

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Behavioral measures: Petition signatures

  • We also collect behavioral measures on top of the survey

measures.

  • We employ constructed real online petitions on the White house

webpage: http://petitions.whitehouse.gov/.

  • H-2B visas are work permits that allow US companies to

temporarily hire low-skilled workers from abroad for seasonal, non-agricultural jobs, typically for work in restaurants, tourism, or construction.

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Intention to sign petitions

Consider the following two petitions and decide whether you would like to sign one of them: Increase the annual cap on H-2B visas This petition suggests an increase in the annual cap on H-2B visas from 66,000 to 99,000. Decrease the annual cap on H-2B visas This petition suggests a decrease in the annual cap on H-2B visas from 66,000 to 33,000.

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Real petition

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Sample

  • We employ a panel from an online market research company

(Research Now).

  • 3130 subjects that are representative of the US population in terms
  • f age, region, gender, and income.

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Outline of talk

Experimental design Main experimental results Obfuscated follow-up: design and results Conclusion

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Prior about the Mariel boatlift: Wages

.1 .2 .3 .4 .5 .6 .7

Fraction

S t r

  • n

g l y d e c r e a s e S

  • m

e w h a t d e c r e a s e N

  • e

f f e c t S

  • m

e w h a t i n c r e a s e S t r

  • n

g l y i n c r e a s e

Low-skilled, wages

High-skilled 23 / 36

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Prior about the Mariel boatlift: Unemployment

.1 .2 .3 .4 .5 .6 .7

Fraction

S t r

  • n

g l y i n c r e a s e S

  • m

e w h a t i n c r e a s e N

  • e

f f e c t S

  • m

e w h a t d e c r e a s e S t r

  • n

g l y d e c r e a s e

Low-skilled, unemployment

High-skilled 24 / 36

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Do people update their beliefs?

2.30 2.50 2.70 2.90 3.10 3.30

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low-skilled, wages: Most Americans

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Do people update their beliefs?

2.30 2.50 2.70 2.90 3.10 3.30

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low-skilled, wages: Most Americans

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Do beliefs causally affect people’s attitudes?

  • Treatment successfully created exogenous variation in beliefs

about the economic impact of immigration.

  • Do beliefs about the economic impact causally affect people’s

support for immigration?

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Attitudes towards low-skilled immigration

2.60 2.80 3.00 3.20 3.40 3.60

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low−skilled, not familiar

2.60 2.80 3.00 3.20 3.40 3.60

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low−skilled, highly familiar

Figure: high-skilled 27 / 36

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Attitudes towards low-skilled immigration

2.60 2.80 3.00 3.20 3.40 3.60

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low−skilled, not familiar

2.60 2.80 3.00 3.20 3.40 3.60

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low−skilled, highly familiar

Figure: high-skilled 27 / 36

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Petitions: Intention to sign

0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Increase annual cap

0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35 Control Treatment

Decrease annual cap

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Petitions: Intention to sign

0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Increase annual cap

0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35 Control Treatment

Decrease annual cap

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Do changes of intentions translate into changes in behavior?

0.00 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Increase annual cap

0.00 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Decrease annual cap

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Do changes of intentions translate into changes in behavior?

0.00 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Increase annual cap

0.00 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Decrease annual cap

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Heterogenous treatment effects: Pre-treatment beliefs

  • .5

.5 Effect size

  • V. negative
  • S. negative

Neutral

  • S. positive
  • V. positive

Prior

Low-skilled

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Outline of talk

Experimental design Main experimental results Obfuscated follow-up: design and results Conclusion

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Obfuscated follow-up study

We mitigate concerns about persistence and demand effects through an obfuscated follow-up study:

  • Respondents receive generic invitation emails.
  • We use different consent forms and layout of surveys.

Consent forms

  • We obfuscate the purpose of the follow-up study by first asking

questions about other topics (e.g., redistribution, taxation).

  • We ask questions about immigration attitudes at the end of the

follow-up.

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Do changes in attitudes persist?

2.60 2.80 3.00 3.20 3.40 3.60

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low−skilled immigrants

High-skilled 33 / 36

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Do changes in attitudes persist?

2.60 2.80 3.00 3.20 3.40 3.60

Mean ± s.e.m.

Control Treatment

Low−skilled immigrants

High-skilled 33 / 36

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Outline of talk

Experimental design Main experimental results Obfuscated follow-up: design and results Conclusion

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Conclusion

  • Labor market concerns are a quantitatively important driver of

people’s support for immigration.

  • Changes in attitudes translate into changes in political behavior.
  • Treatment effects persist in obfuscated follow-up study where

concerns about demand effects are mitigated.

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References I

Clemens, Michael A., “What the Mariel Boatlift of Cuban Refugees Can Teach Us about the Economics of Immigration: An Explainer and a Revelation,” 2017. Hainmueller, Jens and Daniel J Hopkins, “Public Attitudes Toward Immigration,” Annual Review of Political Science, 2014, 17, 225–249. Kuziemko, Ilyana, Michael I Norton, Emmanuel Saez, and Stefanie Stantcheva, “How Elastic are Preferences for Redistribution? Evidence from Randomized Survey Experiments,” American Economic Review, 2015, 105 (4), 1478–1508.

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