Nov 24, 2024  
Catalogue 2014-2015 
    
Catalogue 2014-2015 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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ECON 386 - The Economics of Immigration

Semester Offered: Spring
1 unit(s)


This course examines the theoretical and empirical models that economists have developed to study the economic impact of immigration. The course describes the history of immigration policy in the United States and analyzes the various economic issues that dominate the current debate over immigration policy. These issues include the changing contribution of immigrants to the country’s skill endowment; the rate of economic assimilation experienced by immigrants; the impact of immigrants on the employment opportunities of other workers in the US; the impact of immigrant networks on immigrants and the source and magnitude of the economic benefits generated by immigration. The course also studies the social and civic dimensions of immigration - how it relates to education, marriage, segregation etc. We compare various cohorts of immigrants who entered the US at different time periods. We also compare generations residing in the US, more specifically immigrants and their children. Ms. Basu.

Prerequisites: ECON 201  and ECON 209 .

Recommended: ECON 210  recommended.

 



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