Papers
AER2026

Labor Market Competition and the Assimilation of Immigrants

Christoph Albert, Albrecht Glitz, Joan Llull

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-05-01
Primary source
AER
TL;DR

This paper shows that the wage assimilation of immigrants is the result of the intricate interplay between individual skill accumulation and dynamic labor market equilibrium effects.

AERLaborStructuralTheory
Metadata matches
Sources
AER
Fields
Labor
Methods and data
StructuralTheory
Abstract

This paper shows that the wage assimilation of immigrants is the result of the intricate interplay between individual skill accumulation and dynamic labor market equilibrium effects. When immigrants and natives are imperfect substitutes, rising immigrant inflows widen the wage gap between them. Using a production function framework in which workers supply both general and host-country-specific skills, we show that this labor market competition channel explains about one-fifth of the large increase in the average immigrant–native wage gap across arrival cohorts in the United States since the 1960s. The results further reveal substantial heterogeneity across different groups of immigrants. (JEL J22, J23, J24, J31, J61, K37, O33)

Source versions
AER2026-05-01
American Economic Review 116(5):1682-1722
10.1257/aer.20220865
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