2020
DOI: 10.3368/jhr.56.2.0616-8015r2
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Guest Worker Programs and Human Capital Investment

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Cited by 12 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The United States and Mexico made a set of three bilateral agreements to regulate Mexico-U.S. ows of temporary low-skill labor, spanning almost the entire period from 1942 through 1964. 3 At rst this bracero program supplied Mexican labor to a mix of manual jobs in U.S. agriculture, railroads, mining, and construction, raising remittance receipts and human capital investment in Mexico (Kosack 2016). After World War 2 the program evolved to focus almost entirely on agriculture, and grew to supply almost half a million seasonal workers each year to U.S. farms, with contracts typically lasting between six weeks and six months (Salandini 1973, 158).…”
Section: The Bracero Agreementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The United States and Mexico made a set of three bilateral agreements to regulate Mexico-U.S. ows of temporary low-skill labor, spanning almost the entire period from 1942 through 1964. 3 At rst this bracero program supplied Mexican labor to a mix of manual jobs in U.S. agriculture, railroads, mining, and construction, raising remittance receipts and human capital investment in Mexico (Kosack 2016). After World War 2 the program evolved to focus almost entirely on agriculture, and grew to supply almost half a million seasonal workers each year to U.S. farms, with contracts typically lasting between six weeks and six months (Salandini 1973, 158).…”
Section: The Bracero Agreementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Very recently the immigration literature has turned to evaluating labor-market effects of real-world changes to immigration policy restrictions (e.g. Beerli and Peri 2015;Kennan 2017), but evidence remains scant, and the bracero program in particular remains little-studied (Kosack 2016). 2 This is in part because immigration policies-like licensing restrictions in trade policy-are inherently di cult to quantify (Beine et al 2015).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For many decades, Mexico has been a major migrant sending country to the U.S. due to diverse social and economic ties that have supported migrant flows between both countries ( 61 , 62 ). Return migration is not uncommon and our research demonstrates that tattoos are pervasive among persons with histories of U.S. migration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Shocks that increase the expected utility of college graduates abroad (W i,h ) have a positive effect on human capital formation (H i ) and on the positive selection of emigrants (as reflected by the ratio of high-skilled to low-skilled emigration rates, ρ i ) (e.g., Abarcar and Theoharides, 2021, Khanna and Morales, 2017, Shrestha, 2017, Theoharides, 2018. Shocks that increase the expected utility of the less-educated abroad (W i,l ) have a negative effect on both variables (e.g., de Brauw and Giles, 2017, Kosack, 2021, Pan, 2017. This establishes the micro-foundations of the link between emigration rates and pre-migration human capital formation in a multi-destination framework.…”
Section: Generalized Approach: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%