Immigrants wage gap in the Great Buenos Aires labor market : how important are differences in human capital?

Abstract: Labor market performance of native and immigrant workers differ in terms of their employment opportunities, their insertion by sector of employment, their labor legislation protection and their income. This paper analyses why the two groups of workers perform so differently by estimating a Mincer equation and decomposing income differentials using the Oaxaca-Blinder method. The difference in income is assigned to different effects, endowment and return to those endowments. Immigrants have a higher probability of working in low productivity jobs and of being exposed to higher than average informality. Moreover, both internal and border country immigrants face a lower rate of labor legislation protection, have on average a lower level of human capital and earn lower income than native workers. Consistently, immigrants earn less than natives, being immigrants from border countries in worse situation than internal immigrants as opossed to that reference group. Female immigrants earn systematically less than their natives counterparts. Wage gap ranges from 13% to 71 % percent. Part of the wage gap is attributable to occupational segregation i.e. immigrants crowding into lower paid highly-informal occupations. The analysis shows that Native workers have on average more favorable characteristics, and experience slightly higher returns to these characteristics in terms of income than immigrant workers even after controlling for occupational insertion.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Montoya, Silvia, Giordano, Virginia
Format: Documento de trabajo biblioteca
Language:eng
eng
Published: Universidad Católica Argentina. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas 2012
Subjects:INMIGRANTES, CAPITAL HUMANO, MERCADO LABORAL, SALARIO,
Online Access:https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/2281
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