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Abstract
A major concern with immigrants coming into the United States is that they adversely affect
domestic workers through job competition and wage depression.We study the displacement
and wage reduction effects of immigrants in California vegetable production, which is labor
intensive, and 95% of the farmworkers in California are immigrants. Our findings show that
this concern is not valid in vegetable production because the addition of one new immigrant
displaces only 0.0123 domestic workers, and wage reduction is inconsequential. But one
immigrant worker increases the vegetable production by $23,457 and augments the
productivity of skilled workers, material inputs, and capital by $11,729.