Back to Search Start Over

Emigration and the quality of home country institutions

Authors :
Docquier, Frédéric
Lodigiani, Elisabetta
Rapoport, Hillel
Schiff, Maurice
UCL - SSH/IMMAQ/IRES - Institut de recherches économiques et sociales
University of Luxemburg and Centro Study Luca d'Agliano - CREA
CID, Harvard University, Bar-Ilan University and EQUIPPE - Department of Economics
World Bank - Development Economics Research Group
UCL
University of Luxemburg and Centro Study Luca d'Agliano
CID, Harvard University, Bar-Ilan University and EQUIPPE
World Bank
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Emigration affects institutions at home in a number of ways. While people may have fewer incentives to voice when they have exit options, emigrants can voice once abroad and contribute to the diffusion of democratic values and norms. We first document these channels and then consider dynamic-panel regressions to investigate the overall impact of emigration on institutions in the home country. We find that both openess to migration and human capital have a positive impact on institutions (as measured by standard democracy and economic freedom indices). This implies that unskilled migration has a positive effect on institutional quality while the effect of skilled migration (or brain drain) is ambiguous. Using the point estimates from our regressions, we simulate the marginal effect of skilled emigration on institutional quality. In general, the simulations confirm that the brain drain has an ambiguous impact on institutions, though a significant institutional gain obtains for a limited set of countries when incentive effects of the brain drain on human capital formation are taken into account.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..64a25051d147c29a91045c5cdae2bac5