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EMPLOYMENT VERIFICATION MANDATES AND THE LABOR MARKET OUTCOMES OF LIKELY UNAUTHORIZED AND NATIVE WORKERS
Authors:CATALINA AMUEDO‐DORANTES  CYNTHIA BANSAK
Institution:1. Amuedo‐Dorantes: Professor, Department of Economics, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182. Phone 619‐594‐1663, Fax 619‐594‐5062, E‐mail camuedod@mail.sdsu.edu;2. Bansak: Associate Professor, Department of Economics, St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY 13617. Phone 315‐229‐5428, Fax 315‐229‐5819, E‐mail cbansak@stlawu.edu
Abstract:As recent efforts to reform immigration policy at the federal level have failed, states have started to take immigration matters into their own hands and researchers have been paying closer attention to state dynamics surrounding immigration policy. Yet, to this date, there is not a clear understanding of the consequences of enforcing E‐Verify on likely unauthorized immigrants or on natives across the United States. This study aims to fill in that gap by analyzing the impact that the enactment of various types of E‐Verify mandates may have on the employment and wages of these groups. We find that the enactment of employment verification mandates reduces the employment likelihood of likely unauthorized workers. Additionally, it raises the hourly wages of likely unauthorized women. None of these impacts are observed among a similarly skilled sample of naturalized Hispanic immigrants. Finally, the enactment of E‐Verify mandates appears to raise the employment likelihood of alike non‐Hispanic natives, while raising the hourly wage of native‐born male employees, alluding to the potential substitutability of unauthorized immigrants and non‐Hispanic natives. (JEL J2, J3, J6)
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