Pierre
Brochu ~ Department of Economics ~ University of Ottawa
Temporary Foreign Workers and
Firms: Theory and Canadian Evidence
with Till
Gross and Christopher Worswick
Canadian
Journal of Economics,
Vol. 53 No. 3 (August 2020), pp. 871-915
Abstract:
Temporary Foreign
Worker (TFW) programs have grown considerably in size when uncapped. We develop
a simple efficiency-wage model to explain this phenomenon and examine the
empirical evidence for it. We also use the model to evaluate the implications
of TFW programs for domestic workers. In our framework, firms which have been
unable to find domestic workers may hire TFWs at the wage previously advertised
to domestic workers. Due to the lower outside option for TFWs than domestic
workers, TFWs will exert more effort for the same wage. Firms would thus prefer
to hire otherwise identical TFWs rather than domestic workers. Our model
identifies an unintended consequence of a TFW program: since the repercussions
of a failed domestic job search are less severe if a TFW may be hired instead,
firms have an incentive to lower their wage offers made to domestic workers.
Using Canadian data, we find that, relative to domestic workers, TFWs work
longer hours, have lower rates of absenteeism, and are less likely to be laid
off, consistent with higher effort in our model. Moreover, for TFWs from home
countries with a relatively high outside option, effort is lower than for TFWs
from other countries.
Older
version: Centre for
Research and Analysis of Migration (CreAM) Discussion Paper, 2016.
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