什么时候“过度”不平等还不够?以色列移民的选择

Eric D. Gould, Omer Moav
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引用次数: 19

摘要

本文根据一个人的可观察技能和不可观察技能考察了不平等对移民动机的影响。Borjas(1987)表明,当一个潜在的外国目的地的技能回报更高时,高技能个体比低技能个体更有可能移民。在这个框架的基础上,我们开发了一个模型,该模型表明,这一预测适用于教育等可观察到的技能,这些技能在容易转移到另一个国家的意义上是“通用的”。然而,我们表明,不可观察技能与移民概率之间的关系是倒u型的——因为不可观察技能是“一般技能”和“特定国家技能”的混合体,这些技能不容易转移。我们用一个独特的数据集来检验我们模型的预测,该数据集包含1995年至2004年间从以色列移民的信息,并结合1995年迁入者和滞留者的一整套人口和劳动力市场变量。通过利用以色列和美国在不同部门(行业和职业)的可观察技能(教育)和不可观察技能回报方面的差异,我们发现强有力的证据表明,与美国相比,以色列的不可观察技能回报较低,吸引了高能力的以色列人离开该国。此外,我们发现,如果以色列每个行业的教育回报都提高到美国的水平,那么教育与移民率之间几乎全部的正相关关系将被消除。总的来说,结果有力地支持了我们的模型,以及在移民选择分析中区分一般技能和“特定国家”技能的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When is 'Too Much' Inequality Not Enough? The Selection of Israeli Emigrants
This paper examines the effect of inequality on the incentives to emigrate according to a person’s observable and unobservable skills. Borjas (1987) shows that higher skilled individuals are more likely to emigrate than lower skilled individuals when the returns to skill are higher in a potential foreign destination. Building on this framework, we develop a model which shows that this prediction holds for observable skills like education which are "general" in the sense of being easily transferable to another country. However, we show that the relationship between unobservable skills and the probability of emigrating is an inverse U-shape - since unobservable skills are a mixture of "general skills" and "country-specific skills" which are not easily transferable. We examine the predictions of our model with a unique data set containing information on who emigrates from Israel between 1995 and 2004, combined with a full set of demographic and labor market variables for both movers and stayers in 1995. By exploiting differences between Israel and the United States in the returns to observable (education) and unobservable skills across different sectors (industries and occupations), we find strong evidence that a lower return to unobservable skills in Israel versus the US entices higher ability Israelis to leave the country. Also, we find that virtually the entire positive relationship between education and the rate of emigration would be eliminated if the returns to education were increased in Israel to US levels within each industry. Overall, the results strongly support our model and the importance of differentiating between general and "country-specific" skills in the analysis of immigrant selection.
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