TY - UNPB
T1 - Nationality Discrimination in the Labor Market
T2 - Theory and Test
AU - Bodvarsson, Orn
AU - Sessions, John
PY - 2010/7
Y1 - 2010/7
N2 - When immigrants experience “nationality discrimination” in the labor market, ceteris paribus their earnings are
lower than native-born workers because they were born abroad. The challenge to testing for nationality discrimination is
that the native/immigrant earnings gap will very likely also be influenced by productivity differences driven by incomplete
assimilation of immigrants, as well as the possibility of racial or gender discrimination. There is relatively little empirical
literature, and virtually no theoretical literature, on this type of discrimination. In this study, a model of nationality
discrimination where customer prejudice and native/immigrant productivity differences jointly influence the earnings gap is
presented. We derive an extension of Becker’s Market Discrimination Coefficient (MDC), applied to the case of nationality
discrimination when there are productivity differences. A number of novel implications are obtained. We find, for example,
that the MDC depends upon relative immigrant productivity and relative immigrant labor supply. We test the model on data
for hitters and pitchers in Major League Baseball, an industry with a history of immigration, potential for customer
discrimination, and clean, detailed micro-data on worker productivities and race. OLS and decomposition methods are used
to estimate the extent of discrimination. We find no compelling evidence of discrimination in the hitter group, but evidence
of ceteris paribus underpayment of immigrant pitchers. While our test case is for a particular industry, our theoretical
model, empirical specifications, and general research design, are quite generalizable to many other labor markets.
AB - When immigrants experience “nationality discrimination” in the labor market, ceteris paribus their earnings are
lower than native-born workers because they were born abroad. The challenge to testing for nationality discrimination is
that the native/immigrant earnings gap will very likely also be influenced by productivity differences driven by incomplete
assimilation of immigrants, as well as the possibility of racial or gender discrimination. There is relatively little empirical
literature, and virtually no theoretical literature, on this type of discrimination. In this study, a model of nationality
discrimination where customer prejudice and native/immigrant productivity differences jointly influence the earnings gap is
presented. We derive an extension of Becker’s Market Discrimination Coefficient (MDC), applied to the case of nationality
discrimination when there are productivity differences. A number of novel implications are obtained. We find, for example,
that the MDC depends upon relative immigrant productivity and relative immigrant labor supply. We test the model on data
for hitters and pitchers in Major League Baseball, an industry with a history of immigration, potential for customer
discrimination, and clean, detailed micro-data on worker productivities and race. OLS and decomposition methods are used
to estimate the extent of discrimination. We find no compelling evidence of discrimination in the hitter group, but evidence
of ceteris paribus underpayment of immigrant pitchers. While our test case is for a particular industry, our theoretical
model, empirical specifications, and general research design, are quite generalizable to many other labor markets.
M3 - Working paper
T3 - Bath Economics Research Working Papers
BT - Nationality Discrimination in the Labor Market
PB - Department of Economics, University of Bath
CY - Bath, U. K.
ER -