S. Zahniser, T. Hertz, P. Dixon, Maureen T. Rimmer
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引用次数: 3
Abstract
hanges to U.S. immigration laws and policies could alter the supply of foreign-born labor to all industries, including agriculture. As of March 2010, unauthorized immigrants accounted for 5.2% of the U.S. civilian labor force, according to estimates by Passell and Cohn (2011). In crop agriculture, this proportion is much higher: 48% of hired farmworkers are unauthorized, according to data for 2007-09 from the U.S. Department of Labor’s National Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS) (Carroll, Georges, and Saltz, 2011). Similar survey-based data are not available for the livestock and animal product sectors, although unauthorized immigrant workers are certainly present in those sectors as well. To better understand how changes in the supply of foreign-born labor might affect agriculture, we use a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model of the U.S. economy to evaluate two different scenarios: (1) a 156,000-person increase in the number of temporary nonimmigrant farmworkers, such as those now admitted via the H-2A Temporary Agricultural Program, and (2) a 5.8-million-person reduction in the number of unauthorized workers in all sectors of the economy, including agriculture. These figures were chosen to represent possible policy-induced changes to the supply of labor but do not represent an assessment of the effects of any specific legislative proposal. A CGE model is well suited for this type of analysis because it takes account of linkages between factor and product markets in all industries, allowing us to quantify the potential effects of changes in immigration policy on domestic demand for U.S. agricultural output, on the U.S. labor market and wage costs to agriculture, and on exchange rates and international agricultural trade. In this article, we summarize the main findings of our modeling work and discuss the evolving economic context for foreign-born farm labor in the United States. A more detailed discussion of our modeling results may be found in a recently published report by USDA’s Economic Research Service (Zahniser, et al., 2012). An analysis of the status of current legislative proposals relating to immigration and agriculture may be found in Martin (2012).
美国移民法律和政策的变化可能会改变包括农业在内的所有行业的外国出生劳动力供应。根据Passell和Cohn(2011)的估计,截至2010年3月,非法移民占美国民用劳动力的5.2%。在农作物农业中,这一比例要高得多:根据美国劳工部全国农业工人调查(NAWS) 2007-09年的数据(Carroll, Georges, and Saltz, 2011), 48%的雇佣农场工人是未经授权的。牲畜和动物产品部门没有类似的基于调查的数据,尽管这些部门肯定也存在非法移民工人。为了更好地理解外国出生劳动力供应的变化如何影响农业,我们使用美国经济的可计算一般均衡(CGE)模型来评估两种不同的情景:(1)临时非移民农场工人数量增加156,000人,例如现在通过H-2A临时农业计划进入的工人;(2)包括农业在内的所有经济部门的未经授权工人数量减少580万人。选择这些数字是为了表示政策可能导致的劳动力供应变化,但并不代表对任何具体立法建议的影响的评估。CGE模型非常适合这种类型的分析,因为它考虑了所有行业中要素和产品市场之间的联系,使我们能够量化移民政策变化对美国农业产出的国内需求、美国劳动力市场和农业工资成本、汇率和国际农业贸易的潜在影响。在这篇文章中,我们总结了我们的建模工作的主要发现,并讨论了在美国的外国出生的农场劳动力的不断变化的经济背景。关于我们的建模结果的更详细的讨论可以在美国农业部经济研究局最近发表的一份报告中找到(Zahniser, et al., 2012)。马丁(2012)对目前有关移民和农业的立法提案的现状进行了分析。