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IZA
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Who Is Against Immigration? A Cross-Country Investigation of Individual Attitudes toward Immigrants
by
Anna Maria Mayda
(April 2004)
published in: Review of Economics and Statistics, 2006, 88 (3), 510-530
Abstract:
This paper empirically analyzes both economic and non-economic determinants of attitudes
toward immigrants, within and across countries. The two individual-level survey data sets
used, covering a wide range of developed and developing countries, make it possible to test
for interactive effects between individual characteristics and country-level attributes. The
paper identifies and investigates a strong empirical regularity concerning the relationship
between individual skill and attitudes toward immigrants. I find that individuals with higher
levels of skill are more likely to be pro-immigration in high per capita GDP countries and less
likely in low per capita GDP countries. Additional results, based on a smaller sample of
countries, suggest a labor-market explanation for this cross-country pattern. The variation
across countries in the correlation between skill and preferences appears to be related to
differences in the skill composition of natives relative to immigrants across destination
economies. This finding is consistent with the predictions of the Heckscher-Ohlin model, in
the absence of factor-price-insensitivity, and of the factor-proportions-analysis model. Finally,
non-economic variables also appear to be correlated with immigration attitudes but they do
not seem to alter significantly the results on the economic explanations.
Text: See Discussion Paper No. 1115
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