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Featured researches published by Mathis Wagner.


Archive | 2015

The Impact of Syrians Refugees on the Turkish Labor Market

Ximena V. Del Carpio; Mathis Wagner

Currently 2.5 million Syrians fleeing war have found refuge in Turkey, making it the largest refugee-hosting country worldwide. This paper combines newly available data on the distribution of Syrian refugees across Turkey and the Turkish Labour Force Survey to assess their labor market impact. Syrian refugees are overwhelmingly employed informally, since they were not issued work permits, making their arrival a well-defined supply shock to informal labor. Consistent with economic theory our instrumental variable estimates, which also control for distance from the Turkish-Syrian border, suggest large-scale displacement of natives in the informal sector. At the same time, consistent with occupational upgrading, there are increases in formal employment for the Turkish - though only for men without completed high school education. Women and the high-skilled are not in a good position to take advantage of lower cost informal labor. The low educated and women experience net displacement from the labor market and, together with those in the informal sector, declining earning opportunities.


Archive | 2014

Immigrant versus natives ? displacement and job creation

Caglar Ozden; Mathis Wagner

The impact of immigration on native workers is driven by two countervailing forces: the degree of substitutability between natives and immigrants, and the increased demand for native workers as immigrants reduce the cost of production and output expands. The literature so far has focused on the former substitution effect, while ignoring the latter scale effect. This paper estimates both of these effects using labor force survey data from Malaysia (1990-2010), a country uniquely suited for understanding the impact of low-skilled immigration. The instrumental variable estimates imply that the elasticity of labor demand (3.4) is greater than the elasticity of substitution between natives and immigrants (2.5). On average the scale effect outweighs the substitution effect. For every ten additional immigrants, employment of native workers increases by 4.1 in a local labor market. These large reallocation effects are accompanied by negligible relative wage changes. At the national level, a 10 percent increase in immigrants, equivalent to 1 percent increase in labor force, has a small positive effect on native wages (0.14 percent). The impact of immigration is highly heterogeneous for natives with different levels of education, resulting in substantial changes in skill premiums and hence inequality. Immigrants on net displace natives with at most primary education; while primarily benefiting those with a little more education, lower secondary or completed secondary education.


The Scandinavian Journal of Economics | 2015

Local Labor Supply Responses to Immigration

Ximena V. Del Carpio; Caglar Ozden; Mauro Testaverde; Mathis Wagner

How natives adjust is central to an understanding of the impact of immigration in destination countries. Using detailed labor force data for Malaysia for 1990–2010, we provide estimates of native responses to immigration on multiple extensive margins and rare evidence for a developing country. Instrumental variable estimates show that increased immigration to a state causes substantial internal inward migration, consistent with the fact that immigration increases the demand for native workers. Relocating Malaysian workers are accompanied by their spouses (three-quarters of whom are housewives) and children who attend school. We find that these effects are concentrated among middle- and lower-skilled Malaysians.


Archive | 2016

Global migration of talent and tax incentives : evidence from Malaysia's returning expert program

Ximena V. Del Carpio; Caglar Ozden; Mauro Testaverde; Mathis Wagner

This paper presents the first evidence on the efficacy of a major program designed to encourage the return migration of high-skilled individuals. The Malaysian Returning Expert Program targets high-skilled Malaysians abroad and provides them with tax incentives to return. At several eligibility thresholds, the probability of acceptance into the program increases discontinuously. Using administrative data on applicants, the analysis is able to identify the impact of acceptance to the Returning Expert Program on the probability of returning to Malaysia. The fuzzy regression discontinuity design estimates suggest that program approval increases the return probability by 40 percent for applicants with a preexisting job offer in Malaysia. There is no significant treatment effect for those who apply without a job offer. The estimated migration elasticity with respect to the net-of-tax rate, averaged across all applicants, is 1.2. Fiscal cost-benefit analysis of the Returning Expert Program finds a modest net fiscal effect of the program, between minus


Experimental Economics | 2011

So You Want to Run an Experiment, Now What? Some Simple Rules of Thumb for Optimal Experimental Design

John A. List; Sally Sadoff; Mathis Wagner

6,900 and plus


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2010

So you want to run an experiment, now what? Some Simple Rules of Thumb for Optimal Experimental Design

John A. List; Sally Sadoff; Mathis Wagner

4,200 per applicant, suggesting that the program roughly pays for itself.


Economic Inquiry | 2015

Policy Variation, Labor Supply Elasticities, and a Structural Model of Retirement

Dayanand Manoli; Kathleen J. Mullen; Mathis Wagner


World Bank Economic Review | 2018

How and Why Does Immigration Affect Crime? Evidence from Malaysia

Caglar Ozden; Mauro Testaverde; Mathis Wagner


Archive | 2018

Moving for prosperity : global migration and labor markets - policy research report

Caglar Ozden; Mathis Wagner; Michael Packard


Revue d'économie du développement | 2017

International Migration and Wages

Caglar Ozden; Michael Packard; Mathis Wagner

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Sally Sadoff

University of California

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Dayanand Manoli

University of Texas at Austin

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Björn Nilsson

Paris Dauphine University

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