Immigration, Employment, and Public Policies
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 3, 2025 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (PST)
- Chair: Francisca Antman, University of Colorado-Boulder
Unaccompanied Migrant Children and Violations of Federal Child Labor Legislation
Abstract
Child labor violations in the United States have quadrupled since 2015. Labor shortages caused by the pandemic, baby boomer retirements, and inflationary pressures have prompted state-level efforts to relax child labor laws, emphasizing teenage labor as cost-effective and respectful of parental rights. However, reports on unaccompanied migrant children (UMCs) being hired post-release from government custody challenge some of those arguments and raise concerns about the potential abuse of at-risk children. In this paper, we explore whether UMC placements, amid changes in state child labor laws, have contributed to county-level child labor violations between 2019 and 2022. We pay attention to the incidence, but also the frequency and seriousness of the infractions—as captured by the number of affected children and whether it involved hazardous occupations. Our findings highlight the need for regulatory controls to ensure the government’s ability to track vulnerable UMCs and ensure children’s well-being.The Self-Employment Decisions of Immigrants in America
Abstract
In this paper, I analyze the relationship between immigrants’ employment engagement in their home countries and their self-employment decisions in the United States. Using a unique dataset with pre and post-migration labor market data from permanent residents, I assess whether individuals who did not work before migrating were more likely to be self-employed in America controlling for demographic characteristics, human capital, and region of origin and destination in the United States, among other factors. This paper belongs to a burgeoning literature studying the relationship between pre and post-migration labor market outcomes of immigrants. Previous work on this area has looked at the persistence of self-employment across borders but has focused on the U.S. outcomes of the subset individuals with home country work experience. However, many immigrants come to America without work experience, whose trajectories I analyze in this paper in addition to studying the experiences of those who worked in their origin countries.Differences in Exposure to Food Insecurity between Foreign-Born and U.S.-Born Households and the Role of SNAP
Abstract
This study examines disparities in food insecurity between foreign-born and U.S.-born-headed households and uses a decomposition analysis to assess the extent and policy pathways through which the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) affects these disparities. We show that, over the past two decades, foreign-born-headed households have consistently experienced higher food insecurity, especially during economic downturns. SNAP policy components contribute to benefit disparities differently depending on the presence of children. Foreign-born-headed households with children receive lower benefits than their U.S.-born counterparts due to reduced participation and generosity. In contrast, foreign-born-headed households without children receive higher benefits, driven by greater participation and generosity, despite stricter eligibility rules. Policy simulations suggest that increasing barriers to participation for foreign-born individuals would further widen the food resource gap, particularly for households with children.Discussant(s)
Christopher Campos
,
University of Chicago
Rene Crespin
,
Michigan State University
Chunbei Wang
,
Virginia Tech
Joaquin Rubalcaba
,
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
JEL Classifications
- J1 - Demographic Economics
- F2 - International Factor Movements and International Business