[eng] This article studies the responses of real wages
and labour market flows of immigrants in Spain for the
period between 1999 and 2019. By using Labour Force
Survey microdata, I examine the cyclicality of job-finding
and job-separation rates for immigrants and natives over
the long Spanish economic expansion and the sharp
contraction. During the expansion, 1999–2007, the jobfinding
rate was higher for immigrants than for natives,
but both rates converged to a lower level after the Great
Recession took place in 2008. I also find that the impact
of the crisis on the job-separation rate was more than
three times as high for immigrants than for natives. By
using longitudinal social security data, I find that wage
cyclicality is higher for immigrants than for natives: a one
percentage point increase in the unemployment rate is
associated with a 0.61 and 0.85% drop in real wages for
natives and immigrants, respectively. However, these differences
only occur among low-tenure workers. This
study provides novel empirical evidence to enrich macroeconomic
theories on the interaction of economic cycles
and the impact of immigration.