Title: Jun Han
1Is Immigration Beneficial to Urban Residents?
The Effect of Labor Migration on the Wage
Structure in China
- Jun Han
- Nankai University
- Shi Li
- Beijing Normal University
2Main Questions
- What is the role of migration in certain labor
market behaviors such as inequality? - How does migration affect inequality?
- What are the effects of migrants on urban
residents?
3Contributions of This Study
- New evidence on the relationship between massive
internal migration and wage structure of China. - Analysis on social effect of migration, which has
been rarely analyzed in the literature. - The first study that analyzes the effect of
migration on the wage structure of immigration
region, emigration region, and the overall
regions.
4Structure
- Data description and introduction of migration
and migrants in China. - The own effect the impact of migration on
migrant wage. - The social effect the effect of migration on the
wages of urban residents. - The effects of migration on education premium,
inequality and residual inequality within city. - The counterfactual results of inequality after
removing own effect and social effect in the
overall country.
5Literature
- The discrimination and convergence in wages and
difference in cohort quality (Borjas 1985, 1995,
1996 and 2003) - The impact of immigration on labor market
outcomes such as wages, native employment, and
inequality (Card 2001, 2005, and 2009 Smith
2006)
6Literature
- The wage structure (Katz and Murphy 1992 Murphy
and Welch 1992 Juhn, Murphy and Pierce 1993
Lemieux 2006) - Wage structure in China ( Zhang, Zhao, Park and
Song 2005 Han 2006 Zhang, Han, Liu and Zhao
2008 Han, Liu and Zhang 2011). - The effect of labor supply of some groups on
others' wages or the wage structure (Juhn and Kim
1999 Acemoglu, Autor and Lyle 2004 Hsieh and
Woo 2005)
7Migration and Migrants in China
- We use the data from Chinas 2005 minicensus,
which surveyed 1 percent of the Chinese
population using a multistage sampling design. - The 2005 minicensus is unique with specific
information on wages and work-related variables. - The 2005 income data is valuable as it consists
of the incomes of migrants, who are severely
undersampled in the annual urban household survey
conducted by the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS).
8 Wage and Fraction of Migrants
9Wages at All Percentiles
10Data Characteristics
11Job Distribution of Migrants in Different
Industries and Occupations
12Job Distribution of Urban Residents in Different
Industries and Occupations
13The Effect of Migration on Wage
- The empirical model is set as follows
- Because we analyze the returns to migration, the
sample only consists of migrants and rural
residents. - As there exists a problem of potential
endogeneity, we use instrument variable (IV)
social network of an individual.
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15- OLS results would bias the estimation results
downward. - Women's migration premium is higher than men's.
16The Social Effect of Migration
- When migrants enter cities, they may crowd out
job opportunities of local urban residents, which
can be defined as substitution effect. - However, there might be social effects of
migration complementary effect of migration on
natives. - The empirical model is set as follows
- We use two sets of IVs here number of origins of
migrants in this city as IV1, and origins of
migrants from first-tier, second-tier,
third-tier, and fourth-tier cities as IV2.
17Individual Level
18City Level
19- The significant and positive coefficients
indicate that migrants have complementary impact
on natives rather than substitution effect. - OLS results tend to underestimate the social
effect of migration. - The elasticity (coefficient) means that native
wage increases 2.2 when the fraction of migrants
in this city increases 10. - Migration has different effects on different
education groups of natives higher-education
natives benefit more from migration as the
complementary effect is higher.
20The Effect of Migration on City Wage Inequality
- We will analyze
- How migration affects the education premium of
natives. - How migration affects the inequality within the
city. - How this impact of migration on inequality is
caused by the residual inequality.
21Fraction of Migrants and College Premium
22Fraction of Migrants and High-School Premium
23Migration and Education Premium
24Migration and City Inequality Urban Residents
25Migration and City Inequality Urban Residents
26Migration and City Inequality Rural Residents
and Migrants
27Migration and City Inequality All Residents
28Migration and Residual Inequality
- We have found that migration can increase the
college premium and lower-tail wage inequality of
urban residents, while the effect is smaller on
high-school premium and higher-tail wage
inequality. - There must be some other factors, such as
within-group inequality (or residual inequality),
which will be discussed in this subsection. - Most of studies have focused on the between-group
inequality while few have touched upon the
within-group inequality. Our study provides a new
evidence on the effect of migration on
within-group inequality in China.
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30The Effect of Migration on Residual Wage of City
Residents
31The Effect of Migration on Residual Wage of All
Residents
32The Role of Migration in the Wage Inequality of
China
- We have analyzed that own effect and social
effect can affect the wage structure and city
inequality. - We conduct a counterfactual analysis of how the
own effect and social effect affect the
inequality of the whole country. - Because the individual situation is more
complicated and we only classify not so
specifically, our analysis only provides a lower
bound of the counterfactual inequality excluding
migration. - Because own effect and social effect mainly
differentiate between group inequality rather
than within-group inequality, we cannot take into
account the residual inequality here.
33Counterfactual Analysis
34Counterfactual Analysis of the Urban Residents
35Counterfactual Analysis of the Rural Residents
and Migrants
36- Own effect has little effect on the inequality of
the whole society, only reducing lower tail while
raising upper tail to a little extent. - However, social effect can enlarge the wage
inequality to some extent. Social effect
contributes around 4.8 to the overall wage
inequality. - For rural residents, the counterfactual wages at
different percentile are similar as the original
wages, which reveals there is almost no effect.
37Concluding Remarks
- China provides a unique experience of massive
internal migration with the segregation of jobs
between migrants and natives. - Under this circumstance, there exists
complementary effect of migration on native
wages, rather than the imperfect substitution
effect that has been found in the literature. - We find that the elasticity of complementation of
migrants is about 0.27, 0.185 and 0.122 for
native college-, high-school-, and
dropout-educated workers.
38- Migrants can benefit from migration, which
results in the wage rise at about 13.9. - Although this is a great improvement, the own
effect'' cannot affect the overall inequality of
the society a great deal. - The social effect'', which is the complementary
effect, affects the overall inequality to a large
extent. Almost 4.8 of the overall inequality can
be explained by this social effect''.
39- If we only consider the urban residents,
migration has also increases the college premium
greatly while it does little to high-school
premium. - Migration increases the wage inequality of urban
residents, with the effect on lower-tail
inequality higher than that on upper-tail
inequality.
40Policy Implication
- Migrants have made great contributions to cities
(in particular the promotion in productivity of
natives) and cities should be more concerned
about the welfare of migrants. - There are still many more barriers in welfare in
addition to hukou, such as the low social
security and medical care, high burden and
frequent overtime shift, low or no salary for
overtime work, discrimination for children
education, and etc.
41- Low welfare and wages might keep migrant away
from cities. - There has been an inverse flow of migrants
recently, due to the industry upgrading and rise
in the labor costs. - How this inverse flow affects the wage structure
and other labor market behaviors will arouse more
interests and further related study.
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