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Analysis
of International Migration and Its Impacts on Developing
Countries
Paola Barrientos
November
2007
This paper provides a review of the
literature on the reasons and consequences of international
migration. The principal determinants of migration are analyzed
and it is seen that educated people from developing countries
are more likely to migrate for several reasons (i.e. network
determinants, costs of moving, pull factors and push factors).
Looking into the empirical data, the global trend is that
emigration of educated people (usually called “brain drain”) has
increased a lot. This trend implies that industrialized
countries are importing highly skilled people from developing
countries and this will certainly have important consequences
for developing countries in the long run. Some researchers argue
that developing countries will loose, since the most qualified
people leave and stop contributing to their country. Others say
that the global trend can be beneficial because positive
spillovers will be created; in the sense that developing
countries will experience higher investments in human capital
(“brain gain”). Empirical findings show that these spillovers
depend on the probability to migrate and the stock of human
capital that a country has. Finally another group of researchers
argues that this process is inevitable, and barriers to
migration should be abolished in order to reap the benefits for
both sending and receiving countries as well as the migrants
themselves.
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