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Economic Reasoning with a Racial Hue: Is the Immigration Consensus Purely Race Neutral?

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  • Malhotra, Neil

    (University of California, Riverside)

  • Newman, Benjamin

    (Stanford University)

Abstract

Leading research is converging upon the finding that citizens from immigrant-receiving nations strongly prefer the entry of high-skilled to low-skilled immigrants. Prior studies have largely interpreted this "skill premium" as deriving from sociotropic economic considerations. We argue that a purely economic conceptualization offers an incomplete understanding of the processes generating the skill premium, as it overlooks the role of prejudice as a factor undergirding citizens' preferences. We contend that the skill premium is a manifestation of prejudice insomuch as it constitutes a preference for those atypical of the existing immigrant population. Through re-analysis of data from published work, as well as via original survey experiments, we demonstrate that a purely economic interpretation of the skill premium fails a range of critical tests. Our findings suggest that rather than solely representing a race-neutral preference for skilled immigrants, the skill premium partly represents a preference against disliked prevalent immigrants.

Suggested Citation

  • Malhotra, Neil & Newman, Benjamin, 2017. "Economic Reasoning with a Racial Hue: Is the Immigration Consensus Purely Race Neutral?," Research Papers repec:ecl:stabus:3590, Stanford University, Graduate School of Business.
  • Handle: RePEc:ecl:stabus:repec:ecl:stabus:3590
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