| Participant | University | Vote | Confidence | Comment | Bio/Vote History |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daron Acemoglu
|
MIT | Strongly Agree | 6 | Bio/Vote History | |
Alberto Alesina
|
Harvard | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | ||
Joseph Altonji
|
Yale | Strongly Agree | 10 | Bio/Vote History | |
Alan Auerbach
|
Berkeley | Agree | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
David Autor
|
MIT | Strongly Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |
Katherine Baicker
|
Harvard | Agree | 3 | Bio/Vote History | |
Marianne Bertrand
|
Chicago | Agree | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
Raj Chetty
|
Stanford | Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |
Judith Chevalier
|
Yale | Strongly Agree | 9 |
See Mankiw's NY Times column for a good discussion. |
Bio/Vote History |
Janet Currie
|
Princeton | Agree | 3 | Bio/Vote History | |
David Cutler
|
Harvard | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
Angus Deaton
|
Princeton | Strongly Agree | 6 | Bio/Vote History | |
Darrell Duffie
|
Stanford | Strongly Agree | 7 |
If the supply of high-skilled labor is constrained as now, productivity is harmed and the average person pays more for goods and services. |
Bio/Vote History |
Aaron Edlin
|
Berkeley | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | ||
Barry Eichengreen
|
Berkeley | Agree | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
Ray Fair
|
Yale | Agree | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
|
|
Yale | Strongly Agree | 1 | Bio/Vote History | |
Claudia Goldin
|
Harvard | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
Austan Goolsbee
|
Chicago | Strongly Agree | 10 |
duh |
Bio/Vote History |
Michael Greenstone
|
Chicago | Strongly Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
|
|
Stanford | Uncertain | 3 |
The big issue in immigration is the families of the workers. Almost any worker is a benefit, but the other family members may be costly. |
Bio/Vote History |
Bengt Holmström
|
MIT | Strongly Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |
Caroline Hoxby
|
Stanford | Uncertain | 10 |
As a matter of economics,question does not have a simple answer.There are trade-offs.Canada's immigration suggests positive overall effects. |
Bio/Vote History |
Kenneth Judd
|
Stanford | Agree | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
Anil Kashyap
|
Chicago | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
Pete Klenow
|
Stanford | Strongly Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
Jonathan Levin
|
Stanford | Agree | 3 |
Economic growth and fiscal benefits, and wage reductions for comparable domestic workers, all seem hard to measure. -see background information here |
Bio/Vote History |
Eric Maskin
|
Harvard | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
|
|
Yale | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
Maurice Obstfeld
|
Berkeley | Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |
Emmanuel Saez
|
Berkeley | Agree | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
José Scheinkman
|
Princeton | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
|
|
MIT | Agree | 3 |
Some highly educated natives would likely lose, but I expect there would be net gains overall. Hard to be very confident, though. |
Bio/Vote History |
Hyun Song Shin
|
Princeton | Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |
Nancy Stokey
|
Chicago | Strongly Agree | 10 | Bio/Vote History | |
Richard Thaler
|
Chicago | Strongly Agree | 8 |
This is a no brainer. You can't be serious about "job creators" without supporting reform here. |
Bio/Vote History |
Christopher Udry
|
Yale | Strongly Agree | 7 |
The overall benefits of increased migration of this kind are enormous. The distribution of these benefits is less well-understood. -see background information here |
Bio/Vote History |
Luigi Zingales
|
Chicago | Strongly Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |