What is the relationship between immigration and the business cycle? Before answering that question, let’s look at some evidence from Statista:
[The chart shows apprehensions and expulsions, but the data is widely believed to be highly correlated with successful undocumented migration.]
There seems to be a modestly pro-cyclical pattern to the data on undocumented migration. Apprehensions rose throughout the 1990s, peaking in 2000. They declined during the subsequent recession, before rising again during the 2004-06 housing boom. There was a steep drop after the 2008 financial crisis, which led to years of high employment. Immigration rose during the boom of 2019, and then fell during the Covid recession of 2020. Immigration was especially high during the period around 2022, when there was a labor shortage and a sharp rise in wages for low skilled workers.
So it seems like a pretty clear pattern; a booming economy draws in more immigrants. Economy —> immigration. Case closed?
Not quite. I suspect that the causation actually goes in both directions. Policy driven changes in immigration may also play a role in determining the business cycle. In previous posts, I suggested that the 2006 crackdown on illegal migration may have contributed to the subsequent housing slump. (To be clear, tight money was the main cause of the 2008-09 recession.) It seems plausible that policy changes also impacted the rate of immigration during the Trump and Biden administrations. A tweet by Catherine Rampell provides some more fine grained data:
Rampell links to another tweet that suggests the recent drop in undocumented immigration is due to policy changes in the US and Mexico:
Because of retiring boomers and a drop in the birth rate, I expected the number of prime age workers to level off during the 2020s. That obviously did not happen. There’s increasing agreement that the big surge in payroll employment over the past 3 plus years has been driven by immigration, much of it undocumented. (As an aside, many undocumented immigrants now claim asylum, and can work during the multi-year period required to process their claims. Thus they are not necessarily working in the underground economy.)
If I am correct that immigration has helped to drive the recent boom in the economy, then the sharp drop in immigration over the past few months might presage a slowing in the economy. Is this why the financial markets seem increasingly worried about the risk of recession? I’m not sure, but it’s something to think about.
READER COMMENTS
Matthias
Aug 15 2024 at 4:21am
Where do most of these migrants come from?
Can we see the impact of ‘missimg people’ in the statistics of eg Mexico? (Just to confirm or falsify or hypothesis that it’s really increased migration doing anything.)
Craig
Aug 15 2024 at 7:36am
“Can we see the impact of ‘missimg people’ in the statistics of eg Mexico? ”
Many go back and forth. I live in TN and FL, where do I count? I’m not really sure to be honest. For instance there are 2mn Canadians who own homes in FL, I don’t believe they are fully resident, one can see the ebb and flow of Canadian license plates on the road. And there are 500k resident from UK who often go back. Are they now no longer counted in Canada and the UK. I’m not sure, but many do work, send remittances to buy homes where they are from and go back periodically.
Scott Sumner
Aug 15 2024 at 12:24pm
Legal migrants are about equally split between Asia and Latin America, with a small number from elsewhere. I believe that undocumented migrants are mostly from Latin America, but some come from as far as China, India and Russia.
Recent studies suggest that the US Census undercounted the recent surge in population by 2 or 3 million.
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