Is Immigration Good for Health? The Effect of Immigration on Older Adult Mortality in the United States
Working Paper 34791
DOI 10.3386/w34791
Issue Date
We measure the impact of increased immigration on mortality among elderly Americans, who rely on the immigrant-intensive health and long-term care sectors. Using a shift-share approach we find a strong impact of immigration on the size of the immigrant care workforce: admitting 1,000 new immigrants would lead to 142 new foreign healthcare workers, without evidence of crowd out of native health care workers. We also find striking effects on mortality: a 25% increase in the steady state flow of immigrants to the US would result in 5,000 fewer deaths nationwide. We identify reduced use of nursing homes as a key mechanism driving this result.
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Copy CitationDavid C. Grabowski, Jonathan Gruber, and Brian E. McGarry, "Is Immigration Good for Health? The Effect of Immigration on Older Adult Mortality in the United States," NBER Working Paper 34791 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34791.Download Citation