Skip to content
A Member of the Law Professor Blogs Network

New Immigration Article: Female Work and Fertility in the United States: Effects of Low-Skilled Immigrant Labor

Social science studies often reveal unexpected consequences from the availability of immigrant workers in the United States.  Here is one recent article from the Social Science Research Network (www.ssrn.com).

Female Work and Fertility in the United States: Effects of Low-Skilled Immigrant Labor” HEINRICH HOCK, Department of Economics, Florida State University, Center for Demography and Population Health, Florida State University; DELIA FURTADO, University of Connecticut – Department of Economics, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).  Abstract:   This paper examines the effects of low-skilled immigration on the work and fertility decisions of high-skilled women born in the United States. The evidence we present indicates that low-skilled immigration to large metropolitan areas between 1980 and 2000 lowered the cost of market-based household services. Using a novel estimation technique to analyze joint decision making, we find that college-educated native females responded, on average, by increasing fertility and reducing short-run labor force participation. These changes were accompanied by a weakening of the negative correlation between work and fertility, as well as an increase in the proportion of women who both bore children and participated in the labor force. Taken in combination, our estimates imply that the continuing influx of low-skilled immigrants substantially reduced the work-fertility tradeoff facing educated urban American women.

KJ