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Erschienen in: Demography 2/2013

01.04.2013

How Job Characteristics Affect International Migration: The Role of Informality in Mexico

verfasst von: Andrés Villarreal, Sarah Blanchard

Erschienen in: Demography | Ausgabe 2/2013

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Abstract

Despite the importance given to employment opportunities as a primary motive for migration, previous studies have paid insufficient attention to the kinds of jobs that are more likely to retain workers in their countries of origin. We use information from a panel survey of Mexican adults to examine how job characteristics affect the risk of international migration. The sampling strategy and overall size of the survey allow us to analyze the effect of employment characteristics on migration from urban areas, which have much greater labor market diversity, and to separate our analysis by gender. We also distinguish migrants according to whether they migrate for work or for other reasons. We find informality to be a significant predictor of international migration. Even after controlling for individual factors including workers’ wages, as well as various household- and community-level predictors, we find that workers employed in the informal sector have significantly higher odds of migrating than their counterparts in the formal sector. The pervasive nature of informality in many developing countries from which a high proportion of international migrants originate may therefore create a constant supply of workers who are predisposed to migrate. Our findings thus have important implications for a proper understanding of the effects of economic development on migration.

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Fußnoten
1
Neoclassical theory of migration focuses primarily on the economically active population. Individuals who are not employed because they are voluntarily out of the labor market—such as students, homemakers, and retired persons—do not fit well into this account.
 
2
As in any survey involving the reinterview of respondents in multiple waves, some cases are lost because of sample attrition. The percentage of cases lost to attrition between consecutive waves of the ENOE is comparable to or lower than that in major longitudinal studies conducted in the United States (e.g., Fitzgerald et al 1998). On average, 2.8 % of individuals from our analytical sample are lost between each of the consecutive waves (i.e., quarters). Some of these cases are due to refusals or incomplete interviews, while others may be due to the relocation of the entire household to another location within the country or abroad. In order to test the sensitivity of our analysis to sample attrition, we replicated our baseline models using an observation period of three quarters instead of four (i.e., four survey waves instead of five). The results were consistent with those presented in the tables in this article.
 
3
See Lindstrom and Lauster (2001) for the use of this type of measure. Return migrants are all those who were living abroad five years prior to the census: that is, in 1995.
 
4
The effects of educational attainment and marital status on the risk of migrating for work are generally stronger for women than for men. For every educational category except complete primary, the coefficients for women’s educational attainment are significantly larger than those for men (at the .05 level).
 
5
Models 5 and 6 in Table 4 are tested using a limited sample because information regarding tenure and union membership is not available every quarter. Model 6 excludes self-employed individuals and employers for whom information about union membership is not available.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
How Job Characteristics Affect International Migration: The Role of Informality in Mexico
verfasst von
Andrés Villarreal
Sarah Blanchard
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2013
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Demography / Ausgabe 2/2013
Print ISSN: 0070-3370
Elektronische ISSN: 1533-7790
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13524-012-0153-5

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