International Migration and Development

Autor: Hanson, Gordon H.
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2008
Předmět:
INTERNATIONAL MOBILITY
EMIGRATION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
MEXICAN IMMIGRANTS
TREATIES
AVERAGE MIGRATION
BRAIN DRAIN
IMMIGRANTS
EMIGRATION OF SKILLED LABOR
EXTERNALITIES
POLICY MAKERS
YOUNG ADULTS
POLITICAL SYSTEMS
ILLEGAL MIGRANTS
MIGRANTS
UNEMPLOYMENT
BORDERS
EFFECTS OF EMIGRATION
IMMIGRATION POLICY
DIASPORA
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
WORLD POPULATION
MIGRATION COSTS
CIVIL WAR
TERRORIST
GROSS NATIONAL INCOME
MIGRANT REMITTANCES
ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION
INFORMATION SERVICES
EFFECTS OF EMIGRATION ON WAGES
SKILLED WORKERS
ADULT POPULATION
LABOR SUPPLY
FINANCIAL MARKETS
PRIMARY EDUCATION
SKILLED EMIGRANTS
VISAS
LIVING STANDARDS
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION
DEMOCRACY
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
FOREIGN LABOR
REMITTANCE
MIGRANT STOCK
OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
WAGES
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
ROLE OF MIGRATION
PROGRESS
IMPORTANT POLICY
NUMBER OF EMIGRANTS
IMMIGRATION CONTROL
LABOR MARKET
EMIGRATION RATE
FAMILY TIES
INCOME INEQUALITY
WAGE STRUCTURE
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
COMPENSATION
RESEARCH ON MIGRATION
LABOR DEMAND
TERTIARY EDUCATION
BRAIN GAIN
MIGRATION POLICY
NATIVE WORKERS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
LEVEL OF EDUCATION
LABOR DEMAND CURVE
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS
FAMILY MEMBERS
IMMIGRANT
CIVIL CONFLICT
NATIONAL POPULATION
CLIMATE CHANGE
ECONOMIC THEORY
HOME COUNTRIES
ILLEGAL ENTRY
KINSHIP
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
PERCENT OF IMMIGRANTS
ILLEGAL MIGRATION
INVESTMENTS IN EDUCATION
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF IMMIGRATION
POLITICAL ECONOMY
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
ACCOUNTING
EMIGRANTS
INCOME TAX
SKILLED MIGRATION
MIGRATION RATES
REMITTANCES
DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH
AVERAGE INCOME
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
SMALL ENTERPRISES
POLITICAL OPPOSITION
SOCIAL PRODUCT
HEALTH CARE
LABOR ECONOMICS
SKILL LEVELS
HUMAN CAPITAL
IMPACT OF MIGRATION
INSURANCE
LABOR MOVEMENTS
ECONOMIC POLICIES
RESPECT
EARNINGS OF IMMIGRANTS
EDUCATED MIGRANTS
IMMIGRANT POPULATION
LABOR EXPORTING COUNTRIES
BORROWING
FOREIGN STUDENTS
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES
ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES
INCOME TAXATION
RETURN MIGRATION
POLICY RESEARCH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
LEGAL STATUS
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
UNSKILLED WORKERS
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
LABOR MARKETS
MIGRANT FLOWS
MIGRATION FLOWS
INFLOW OF REMITTANCES
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
IMMIGRATION QUOTAS
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMICS
HOUSING
SKILLED PROFESSIONALS
MIGRATION DECISIONS
SMALL COUNTRIES
MOTIVATION
INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS
PRIMARY SCHOOLING
WORK EXPERIENCE
SUPPLY OF LABOR
LABOR FORCE
POPULATION CENSUSES
PRACTITIONERS
REFUGEES
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
IMPACT OF IMMIGRATION
Popis: A decade ago, trade and investment liberalization dominated the global economic policy agenda. The World Trade Organization (WTO) had recently been created, the United States, Mexico and Canada were implementing North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and much of Southeast Asia and South America were near the peak of an economic boom that was driven in part by greater openness to inflows of foreign capital. In bilateral and multilateral discussions of economic integration, global migration was often missing from the docket entirely. The growth in labor flows from low-income to high-income countries has not been greeted with universal enthusiasm, either by policy makers or academics. In theory, international migration increases economic efficiency by shifting labor from low-productivity to high-productivity environments. As workers move from Central America to the United States, North Africa to Europe, or Southeast Asia to Australia, the global labor supply shifts from labor abundant to labor-scarce economies, compressing international differences in factor prices and raising global gross domestic product (GDP). Migrants enjoy large income gains family members at home share in these gains through remittances, and non-migrating workers in the sending country enjoy higher wages thanks to a drop in local labor supply (Aydemir and Borjas, 2007).
Databáze: OpenAIRE