Immigration and Prices

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP5083

Authors: Saul Lach

Abstract: This paper examines the behaviour of prices following the unexpected arrival of a large number of Former Soviet Union (FSU) immigrants to Israel during 1990. The paper uses store-level price data on 915 CPI products to show that the increase in aggregate demand prompted by the arrival of the FSU immigration significantly reduced prices during 1990. Controlling for native population size, city and month effects, a one percentage point increase in the ratio of immigrants to natives in a city decreases prices by 0.5 percentage point on average. It is argued that this negative immigration effect is consistent with the arrival of new consumers - the FSU immigrants - having higher price elasticities and lower search costs than the native population. Thus, immigration can have a moderating effect on inflation through its direct effect on product markets, and not only by increasing the supply of labour.

Keywords: Demand and price changes; Immigration; Search models

JEL Codes: L1; D4; E3


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
FSU immigrants (K37)price sensitivity (D41)
price sensitivity (D41)prices (P22)
FSU immigrants engage in search behavior (J61)prices (P22)
FSU immigrants (K37)prices (P22)
ratio of FSU immigrants to natives (J69)prices (P22)

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