Bradley, David2019-08-202019-08-202019-06https://hdl.handle.net/11299/206326University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2019. Major: Economics. Advisor: Ellen McGrattan. 1 computer file (PDF); v, 82 pages.This dissertation studies the interaction of immigration and fiscal policy. Chapter 1 establishes patterns of fertility, education, earnings for both immigrants and their children. Chapter 2 studies the substitutability of similarly qualified immigrants, as measured by educational attainment and degree field, and natives in production. I find a much greater degree of imperfect substitutability than previous literature and as a result can show the effects of previous immigration on the wages of unskilled workers is close to 0. Chapter 3 incorporates the findings from chapters 1 and 2 into a calibrated general equilibrium model with which I can run a number of immigration policy experiments. Using this framework I show that omitting the correlation between the skills of parents and their children will likely understate the effects of any immigration policy change in the U.S.enEssays on ImmigrationThesis or Dissertation