发展中国家移民:选择、收入弹性与辛普森悖论

Michael A. Clemens
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引用次数: 24

摘要

移民如何影响移民所在国的收入,以及收入的增加如何影响移民离开国的移民?答案取决于迁移的人的生产力比不迁移的人高还是低。关于这个问题的理论早已超出了证据。我们提出了来自发展中国家的移民选择对可观察和不可观察的收入决定因素的估计。我们使用了具有全国代表性的调查数据,调查了2010-2015年期间来自99个发展中国家的7,013名积极、昂贵地准备移民的人。我们建立了这些选择措施与移民收入弹性之间的关系模型。在低收入国家,积极准备移民的人的收入比其他人总体高出30%,其中14%的收入是由教育等可观察特征所解释的,12%的收入是由不可观察特征所解释的。在低收入国家,移民需求的收入弹性为0.23。世界上的穷人不是把移民当作次等商品,而是当作正常商品。高收入对子人口内部移民的任何负面影响,在总体上都可以逆转,因为子人口的构成随着收入的增加而变化,这是辛普森悖论的一个例子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Migration from Developing Countries: Selection, Income Elasticity and Simpson's Paradox
How does immigration affect incomes in the countries migrants go to, and how do rising incomes shape emigration from the countries they leave? The answers depend on whether people who migrate have higher or lower productivity than people who do not migrate. Theory on this subject has long exceeded evidence. We present estimates of emigrant selection on both observed and unobserved determinants of income, from across the developing world. We use nationally representative survey data on 7,013 people making active, costly preparations to emigrate from 99 developing countries during 2010–2015. We model the relationship between these measures of selection and the income elasticity of migration. In low-income countries, people actively preparing to emigrate have 30 percent higher incomes than others overall, 14 percent higher incomes explained by observable traits such as schooling, and 12 percent higher incomes explained by un-observable traits. Within low-income countries the income elasticity of emigration demand is 0.23. The world’s poor collectively treat migration not as an inferior good, but as a normal good. Any negative effect of higher income on emigration within sub-populations can reverse in the aggregate, because the composition of sub-populations shifts as incomes rise an instance of Simpson’s paradox.
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