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Efficiency Gains from Liberalizing Labor Mobility
Author(s) -
Docquier Frédéric,
Machado Joël,
Sekkat Khalid
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the scandinavian journal of economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.725
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1467-9442
pISSN - 0347-0520
DOI - 10.1111/sjoe.12097
Subject(s) - economics , externality , robustness (evolution) , general equilibrium theory , income distribution , liberalization , labor mobility , econometrics , international economics , demographic economics , labour economics , macroeconomics , microeconomics , inequality , market economy , mathematical analysis , biochemistry , chemistry , mathematics , gene
In this paper, we quantify the effect of a complete liberalization of cross‐border migration on the world GDP and its distribution across regions. We build a general equilibrium model, endogenizing bilateral migration and income disparities between and within countries. Our calibration strategy uses data on effective and potential migration to identify total migration costs and visa costs by education level. Data on potential migration reveal that the number of people in the world who have a desire to migrate is around 400 million. This number is much smaller than that predicted in previous studies, and reflects the existence of high “incompressible” migration costs. In our benchmark framework, liberalizing migration increases the world GDP by 11.5–12.5 percent in the medium term. Our robustness analysis reveals that the gains are always limited, in the range of 7.0 percent (with schooling externalities) to 17.9 percent (if network effects are accounted for).