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Figure 7.1: Welfare effects of immigration in the destination and the origin The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Table 7.1: Winners and losers from immigration The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015 Group Without immigration With immigration Gain (or loss) ImmigrantsJJ + E + IE + I Destination country: Competing workersB + CC–B Other factors of productionAA + B + DB + D Origin country: Competing workersHH + GG Other factors of productionF + G + IF–(G + I) Net gain due to immigrationD+E
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Figure 7.2: Adding migration costs to the basic immigration model The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.3: Effects of immigration in the destination with upward-sloping labor supply The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.4: Welfare effects of immigration in the destination The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.5: Effects of immigration that increases labor demand and labor supply The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.6: Effects of immigration when immigrants and natives are complements The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.7: Effects of immigration with skilled and unskilled workers The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.8: Effect of immigration on relative supply and demand for communication versus manual skills The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.9: Labor demand is more elastic as physical capital adjusts in the long run The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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Figure 7.10: Three components of international mobility The Economics of Immigration, by Bansak, Simpson & Zavodny ©2015
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