Working Paper : 2105


Authors Maffei-Faccioli, N. and Vella, E.
Title Does Immigration Grow the Pie? Asymmetric Evidence from Germany
Abstract We provide empirical evidence suggesting that net migration shocks can have substantial demand effects, potentially acting like positive Keynesian supply shocks. Using monthly administrative data (2006-2019) for Germany in a structural VAR, we show that the shocks stimulate vacancies, wages, house prices, consumption, investment, net exports, and output. Unemployment falls for natives (dominant jobcreation effect), driving a decline in total unemployment, while rising for foreigners (dominant job-competition effect). The geographic origin of migrants and the education level of residents matter crucially for the transmission. Overall, the evidence implies that the policy debate should focus on redistributive strategies between natives and foreigners.
Creation Date 2021-05-10
Keywords Migration, job creation, job competition, Keynesian supply shocks
Classification JEL C11, C32, E32, F22,
File germanmigration_eer_resubmission.pdf (1796186 bytes)
File-Function First version

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