TY - JOUR AU - Carter,Susan B. AU - Sutch,Richard TI - Historical Perspectives on the Economic Consequences of Immigration into the United States JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Historical Working Paper Series VL - No. 106 PY - 1997 Y2 - December 1997 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/h0106 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/h0106.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Richard C. Sutch 136 Purdue Avenue Kensington Berkeley, CA 94708 Tel: 951-452-7090 E-Mail: richard.sutch@ucr.edu AB - This paper highlights the distinctive features of the theoretical approach taken by scholars" who analyzed the impacts of the mass migration into the United States in the two decades" preceding World War I. Broadly speaking, this literature was couched in terms of the "aggregate" production function, productivity change in factor proportions. Attention was focused on the close interrelatedness among the many" diverse elements in the economy. A notable difference between the historical studies and the recent literature on the impacts" of immigration is the propensity of the current literature to concentrate only on the first-round" consequences. It is easy to show that these will be harmful to resident workers who face direct" competition. Economic historians writing about the earlier period of high immigration went" beyond the first-round effects. Taking a long-run perspective, they identified many aspects of" the mass immigration that were beneficial from the point of view of the resident population." ER -