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2019 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

22. International Migration and Development

Author : Hania Zlotnik

Published in: The Palgrave Handbook of Development Economics

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

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Abstract

This chapter presents newly derived estimates of net migration flows by origin and destination spanning the four decades between 1960 and 2010. These estimates support the proposition that the economic development process itself tends to stimulate migration. Thus, low-income countries, where the development process is lagging behind, are the least likely sources of international migrants, whereas countries where the development process is more advanced, including both middle-income and certain high-income countries, are more likely to be important sources of international migrants. The estimates also corroborate the growing importance of “south-to-north” migration and show that migration among developed countries, far from ceasing, has been on the rise. This chapter then describes the most influential economic theories guiding research on international migration and development, and reviews research on the linkages between the selectivity of international migration and wages, and on the impact of remittances on developing countries. In receiving countries of the developed world, most of which have been increasingly selecting migrants on the basis of skills, the impact of recent migration on wages has tended to be small and largely beneficial. Because skilled persons seek high absolute wages, rich countries attract them, often to the detriment of countries of origin, particularly developing countries with small populations where the stock of skilled persons was small to start with. The boom in global remittances associated with high emigration from middle-income to high-income countries has been contributing to improve the livelihoods of millions of people. The studies reviewed show that remittances not only ensure a satisfactory level of consumption for their recipients and their families, but are also used to improve agricultural productivity or to invest in small or micro-enterprises. In several contexts, remittances increase the school enrollment of children in households with migrants abroad. More generally, remittances boost household incomes and reduce poverty.

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Footnotes
1
Note that in cases where countries split apart, people who moved as internal migrants before the split become international migrants after the split when the place of birth is used to identify international migrants.
 
2
See United Nations Population Division (2005 and 2015a).
 
3
If the number of foreign-born persons living in a country at time t0 is FB0 and that at time t1 is FB1, then:
$$ {\mathrm{FB}}_1={\mathrm{FB}}_0\hbox{--} \mathrm{D}+\mathrm{NM} $$
where D represents the deaths to the foreign-born over the period t0–t1 and NM is the net number of foreign-born migrants arriving (or departing) during the period t0–t1. Then, NM can be obtained as follows:
$$ \mathrm{NM}={\mathrm{FB}}_1\hbox{--} {\mathrm{FB}}_0+\mathrm{D} $$
Because the full matrix of net flows by origin and destination is estimated, one can obtain for each country not only the net migration of the foreign-born but also the net migration of natives by summing over all the possible destinations of those natives. Hence, the overall net migration can be calculated for each country.
 
4
Northern America is the region composed of Bermuda, Canada, Greenland, St. Pierre et Miquelon, and the United States.
 
5
The rich OECD countries in this case include all those in Western Europe plus Australia, Canada and the United States.
 
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Metadata
Title
International Migration and Development
Author
Hania Zlotnik
Copyright Year
2019
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-14000-7_22