Income Disparities, Population and Migration Flows Over the 21st Century

F. Docquier, Joël Machado
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

This paper provides worldwide projections of population, educational attainment, international migration and income for the 21st century. We develop and parametrize a dynamic, stylized model of the world economy that accounts for the key interdependencies between demographic and economic variables. Our baseline scenario is in line with the ‘high-fertility’ population prospects of the United Nations, assumes constant education and migration policies, long-run absolute convergence in total factor productivity (TFP) between emerging and high-income countries, and the absence of economic takeoff in Africa. It predicts a rise in the income share of Asia (from 38 to 59 percent of the world income) and in the demographic share of Africa (from 10 to 25 percent of the world population). However, over the 21st century, the worldwide proportion of adult migrants will only increase by one percentage point (from 3.5 to 4.5 percent). Half of this change is explained by the increased attractiveness of China and India; and the remaining part is explained by the increased migration pressure from Africa to Western Europe. Keeping its immigration policy unchanged, the 15 members of the European Union will see their average immigration rate increase from 7.5 to 17.2 percent. On the contrary, immigration rates will remain stable in the other high-income countries. Then, we assess the sensitivity of our projections to changes in migration policies, TFP disparities, fertility and education. The evolution of productivity in emerging economies and in Africa will have a drastic impact on the worldwide population size, income disparities and the migration pressure to the European Union. The world economy will also be drastically affected if TFP convergence is accompanied by a fall in migration costs to China and India. However, a large increase in the average European immigration rate is obtained under all the scenarios. More than ever, the management of immigration will become a major societal challenge for Europe.
21世纪的收入差距、人口和移民流动
本文提供了21世纪全球人口、教育程度、国际移民和收入的预测。我们开发了一个动态的、程式化的世界经济模型,并将其参数化,该模型解释了人口和经济变量之间的关键相互依赖关系。我们的基线情景与联合国的“高生育率”人口前景一致,假设持续的教育和移民政策,新兴国家和高收入国家之间的全要素生产率(TFP)长期绝对趋同,以及非洲没有经济起飞。它预测亚洲的收入份额(从占世界收入的38%上升到59%)和非洲的人口份额(从占世界人口的10%上升到25%)将会上升。然而,在21世纪,全球成年移民的比例只会增加一个百分点(从3.5%增加到4.5%)。这种变化的一半可以用中国和印度的吸引力增加来解释;剩下的部分可以解释为从非洲到西欧的移民压力的增加。如果保持移民政策不变,欧盟15个成员国的平均移民率将从7.5%上升到17.2%。相反,其他高收入国家的移民率将保持稳定。然后,我们评估了我们的预测对移民政策、TFP差异、生育率和教育变化的敏感性。新兴经济体和非洲生产力的演变将对世界人口规模、收入差距和对欧洲联盟的移民压力产生重大影响。如果TFP趋同的同时,中国和印度的移民成本下降,世界经济也将受到巨大影响。然而,在所有情况下,欧洲平均移民率都有很大的增长。移民管理将比以往任何时候都更成为欧洲面临的重大社会挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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