International Migration and Growth in Developed Countries: A Theoretical Analysis.
We use a two-country version of the quality ladders endogenous growth model and show that free international migration raises world growth if it is driven by imbalances in labour supplies. International migration may, however, lower growth if it is induced by policy differences across, countries. Moreover, other things being equal, workers want to migrate to less populated countries, to countries that subsidize R&D less, to countries with lower tariffs, and to countries with wealthier consumers. Neither structural nor public policy differences generate any differences in growth rates across countries when tariffs are set at non-prohibitively high levels. Copyright 2000 by The London School of Economics and Political Science
Year of publication: |
2000
|
---|---|
Authors: | Lundborg, Per ; Segerstrom, Paul S |
Published in: |
Economica. - London School of Economics (LSE). - Vol. 67.2000, 268, p. 579-604
|
Publisher: |
London School of Economics (LSE) |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
A Schumpeterian Model of the Product Life Cycle.
Segerstrom, Paul S, (1990)
-
The Long-Run Growth Effects of R&D Subsidies.
Segerstrom, Paul S, (2000)
-
Innovation, Imitation, and Economic Growth.
Segerstrom, Paul S, (1991)
- More ...