接触过境移民、公众态度和企业家精神

Nicolás Ajzenman, C. Aksoy, S. Guriev
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引用次数: 22

摘要

大规模移民是否会影响过境国本地人的经济行为、态度和信仰?为了回答这个问题,我们使用了2010年和2016年《转型生活调查》中一个独特的地区层面的小组,以及2015年难民危机期间18个欧洲国家移民主要陆路路线的数据。为了捕捉本地人对过境迁移暴露的外生变化,我们构建了一个工具,该工具基于每个地方到主要始发城市和目的地城市之间最小旅行时间的最佳路线的距离。我们首先表明,与那些距离较远的地方相比,在更容易受到公共交通移民影响的地方,当地人的创业活动大幅下降。然后,我们探索了机制,发现我们的结果可能是由承担风险的意愿以及对机构的信心的下降来解释的。我们还记录了反移民情绪的增加,而对其他少数民族的态度保持不变。我们排除了本地人外迁或与贸易有关的冲击(可能与公共交通迁移混淆)影响我们结果的可能性。使用地方级别的亮度数据,我们还排除了经济活动变化所导致的任何影响。最后,我们发现对其他劳动力市场结果(如失业率或劳动力参与率)没有统计学上显著的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Exposure to Transit Migration, Public Attitudes and Entrepreneurship
Does exposure to mass migration affect economic behavior, attitudes and beliefs of natives in transit countries? In order to answer this question, we use a unique locality-level panel from the 2010 and 2016 rounds of the Life in Transition Survey and data on the main land routes taken by migrants in 18 European countries during the refugee crisis in 2015. To capture the exogenous variation in natives’ exposure to transit migration, we construct an instrument that is based on the distance of each locality to the optimal routes that minimize travelling time between the main origin and destination cities. We first show that the entrepreneurial activity of natives falls considerably in localities that are more exposed to mass transit migration, compared to those located further away. We then explore the mechanisms and find that our results are likely to be explained by a decrease in the willingness to take risks as well as in the confidence in institutions. We also document an increase in the anti-migrant sentiment while attitudes towards other minorities remained unchanged. We rule out the possibility of out-migration of natives or of trade-related shocks (potentially confounded with the mass-transit migration) affecting our results. Using locality-level luminosity data, we also rule out any effect driven by changes in economic activity. Finally, we find no statistically significant effects on other labor market outcomes, such as unemployment or labor force participation.
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