Phillips J A, Massey D S
Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-6298, USA.
Demography. 1999 May;36(2):233-46.
We examine the effect of the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) on migrants' wages using data gathered in 39 Mexican communities and their U.S. destination areas. We examine changes in the determinants of wages before and after the passage of IRCA, as well as the effects of its massive legalization program. Migrants' wages deteriorated steadily between 1970 and 1995, but IRCA did not foment discrimination against Mexican workers per se. Rather, it appears to have encouraged greater discrimination against undocumented migrants, with employers passing the costs and risks of unauthorized hiring on to the workers. Although available data do not permit us to eliminate competing explanations entirely, limited controls suggest that the post-IRCA wage penalty against undocumented migrants did not stem from an expansion of the immigrant labor supply, an increase in the use of labor subcontracting, or a deterioration of the U.S. labor market.
我们利用在39个墨西哥社区及其美国目的地地区收集的数据,研究了《移民改革与控制法案》(IRCA)对移民工资的影响。我们考察了IRCA通过前后工资决定因素的变化,以及其大规模合法化计划的影响。1970年至1995年间,移民的工资稳步下降,但IRCA本身并未煽动对墨西哥工人的歧视。相反,它似乎鼓励了对无证移民的更多歧视,雇主将未经授权雇佣的成本和风险转嫁给了工人。尽管现有数据不允许我们完全排除其他解释,但有限的控制因素表明,IRCA之后对无证移民的工资处罚并非源于移民劳动力供应的增加、劳动力分包使用的增加或美国劳动力市场的恶化。