AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how labor demand shocks in the US, specifically during the Great Recession, impacted Mexican communities linked to those affected areas.
  • - In Mexican regions with strong connections to struggling US markets, return migration increased, emigration decreased, and remittances fell, leading to more local employment but unchanged wages.
  • - The research highlights that when potential migrants in Mexico face reduced job opportunities in the US, it affects local economies and slows down investment in education for children, suggesting implications for future US migration policies.

Article Abstract

Using newly validated data on geographic migration networks, we study how labor demand shocks in the United States propagate across the border with Mexico. We show that the large exogenous decline in US employment brought about by the Great Recession affected demographic and economic outcomes in Mexican communities that were highly connected to the most affected markets in the US. In the Mexican locations with strong initial ties to the hardest hit US migrant destinations, return migration increased, emigration decreased, and remittance receipt declined. These changes significantly increased local employment and hours worked, but wages were unaffected. Investment in children's education also slowed in these communities. These findings document the effects in Mexico when potential migrants lose access to a strong US labor market, providing insight into the potential impacts of stricter US migration restrictions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11315463PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2023.103832DOI Listing

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