This chapter investigates the impact of the imposition of sanctions for employing illegal migrants on the welfare of native laborers. In response to such sanctions, managers in a firm may be reassigned from the supervision of production to the verification of the legality of the firm’s labor force. The chapter analyzes three different conditions of the host country’s labor market: full employment, voluntary unemployment, and minimal wage in combination with involuntary unemployment. It is shown that when the sanctions are steep enough, a profit-maximizing firm will assign managers to verification, which impedes the firm’s productivity. The impact on the wages and / or employment of the native laborers depends on the efficiency of the verifi...
This paper investigates whether employer sanctions for hiring undocumented workers introduced by the...
Illegal migrants supply a valuable productive input: effort. But their status as illegals means that...
Wage theft and its frequent exploitative companions, trafficking and involuntary servitude, have see...
This chapter investigates the impact of the imposition of sanctions for employing illegal migrants o...
We investigate the impact of the imposition of sanctions for employing illegal migrants on the welfa...
By assuming a small open economy, we investigate the effects of employer sanctions on illegal immigr...
Abstract We investigate the effects of changes in the quota for skilled immigrants on the welfare of...
Several factors have led to the current push for sanctions against employers who hire illegal alien...
In this paper’s model, undocumented workers are endogenously sorted into secondary labor markets. Wh...
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) represents an attempt to use labor-market regu...
For low-skilled workers in much of the world, U.S. admission policies make illegal immigration the m...
Governments have rarely been successful in adhering to intended consequences of temporary guest-work...
For a century before 1986, federal law permitted employers to hire undocumented immigrants. The Immi...
This paper studies illegal immigration using an efficiency wage/dual labor market model. The illegal...
Despite extensive and ongoing immigration enforcement efforts, undocumented workers continue to have...
This paper investigates whether employer sanctions for hiring undocumented workers introduced by the...
Illegal migrants supply a valuable productive input: effort. But their status as illegals means that...
Wage theft and its frequent exploitative companions, trafficking and involuntary servitude, have see...
This chapter investigates the impact of the imposition of sanctions for employing illegal migrants o...
We investigate the impact of the imposition of sanctions for employing illegal migrants on the welfa...
By assuming a small open economy, we investigate the effects of employer sanctions on illegal immigr...
Abstract We investigate the effects of changes in the quota for skilled immigrants on the welfare of...
Several factors have led to the current push for sanctions against employers who hire illegal alien...
In this paper’s model, undocumented workers are endogenously sorted into secondary labor markets. Wh...
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) represents an attempt to use labor-market regu...
For low-skilled workers in much of the world, U.S. admission policies make illegal immigration the m...
Governments have rarely been successful in adhering to intended consequences of temporary guest-work...
For a century before 1986, federal law permitted employers to hire undocumented immigrants. The Immi...
This paper studies illegal immigration using an efficiency wage/dual labor market model. The illegal...
Despite extensive and ongoing immigration enforcement efforts, undocumented workers continue to have...
This paper investigates whether employer sanctions for hiring undocumented workers introduced by the...
Illegal migrants supply a valuable productive input: effort. But their status as illegals means that...
Wage theft and its frequent exploitative companions, trafficking and involuntary servitude, have see...