Article(electronic)October 18, 2004

Are migrants more skilled than non‐migrants? Repeat, return, and same‐employer migrants

In: The Canadian journal of economics: the journal of the Canadian Economics Association = Revue canadienne d'économique, Volume 37, Issue 4, p. 830-849

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Abstract

Abstract.  I examine the determinants of inter‐state migration of adults within western Germany, using the German Socio‐Economic Panel from 1984–2000. Migrants who do not change employers represent one‐fifth of all migrants and have higher education and pre‐move wages than non‐migrants. Skilled workers thus have a low‐cost migration avenue that has not been considered in the previous literature. Other migrants are heterogeneous and not unambiguously more skilled than non‐migrants. I confirm that long‐distance migrants are more skilled than short‐distance migrants, as predicted by theory, and I show that return migrants are a mix of successes and failures. Most repeat migration is return migration. JEL classification: J6

Languages

English

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN: 1540-5982

DOI

10.1111/j.0008-4085.2004.00250.x

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