Local Shocks and Internal Migration: The Disparate Effects of Robots and Chinese Imports in the Us

89 Pages Posted: 7 Aug 2021

See all articles by Marius Faber

Marius Faber

University of Basel

Andrés Sarto

New York University (NYU)

Marco Tabellini

Harvard Business School

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Abstract

Migration has long been considered one of the key mechanisms through which labor markets adjust to economic shocks. In this paper, we analyze the migration response of American workers to two of the most important shocks that hit US manufacturing since the late 1990s – Chinese import competition and the introduction of industrial robots. Exploiting plausibly exogenous variation in exposure across US local labor markets over time, we show that robots caused a sizable reduction in population size, while Chinese imports did not. We rationalize these results in two steps. First, we provide evidence that negative employment spillovers outside manufacturing, caused by robots but not by Chinese imports, are an important mechanism for the different migration responses triggered by the two shocks. Next, we present a model where workers are geographically mobile and compete with either machines or foreign labor in the completion of tasks. The model highlights that two key dimensions along which the shocks differ – the cost savings they provide and the degree of complementarity between directly and indirectly exposed industries – can explain their disparate employment effects outside manufacturing and, in turn, the differential migration response.

JEL Classification: J21, J23, J61

Suggested Citation

Faber, Marius and Sarto, Andrés and Tabellini, Marco, Local Shocks and Internal Migration: The Disparate Effects of Robots and Chinese Imports in the Us. IZA Discussion Paper No. 14623, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3900885 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3900885

Marius Faber (Contact Author)

University of Basel ( email )

Petersplatz 1
Basel, CH-4003
Switzerland

Andrés Sarto

New York University (NYU) ( email )

Bobst Library, E-resource Acquisitions
20 Cooper Square 3rd Floor
New York, NY 10003-711
United States

Marco Tabellini

Harvard Business School ( email )

Soldiers Field Road
Morgan 270C
Boston, MA 02163
United States

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