Abstract
The number of undocumented migrants in developed countries has increased in recent years,
which has generated discussions about the extent to which access to public programs should
be restricted for this population. This is the first paper that estimates the effects of restricting
access to one of these public programs, health care, on mortality rates of undocumented immigrants.
We exploit the natural experiment that arises from a reform implemented in Spain
in September 2012 that introduced this restriction. We show that, during the first three years
of implementation, the restriction increased the mortality rate of undocumented immigrants
by 16%. We also document small changes in the composition of the treated population with
5% of middle educated individuals being substituted by lower educated ones. However, this
selective migration can only account for 10% of our mortality effects. Our results show the
large effects of health insurance coverage on the health status of vulnerable populations
and have important policy implications for developed countries currently receiving sizeable
migration flows.