Title: Migration I
1Migration - I
- Why study migration?
- Types of migrationduration and destination
- Explanations of migration
- Push and Pull factors (Lee)
- Migration as an individual decision
(Harris-Todaro) - Migration as a household decision (Stark)
- Readings Parnwell Chant Radcliffe
2Why Migration?
- Common feature of developing countries
- coping strategy
- improvement strategy
- Urbanisation problems
- pressure on urban infrastructure housing,
health, education, transport - competition for jobs drives wages down
- Migration and Immigration policy
- within countryChina, Vietnam
- between countries developed country policy
3Types of Migration
- Duration
- seasonal agriculture, tourism
- oscillating repeated, short-term movements to
several destinations - relay household members move in sequence
- circular/return long-term movement but return to
home - Destination
- rural to urban rapid urbanisation in LA and EA,
latterly in SSA - rural to rural commercial agriculture mines
land resettlement - between countries developed and developing
4International Destinations
- Predominance of 1 or 2 origin countries
- geographically close
- NZ to OZ Mex to US Russia to Finland Cambodia
to Thailand Lesotho to SA - refugees
- Somalia to Denmark Iraq, Chile to Sweden
- Persistence of traditional flows
- Ireland, India to UK French colonies to France
- Emerging flows
- China, Haiti to France China to USA, Canada, OZ
5Push and Pull factors (Lee)
- Push factors
- economic high population density, low wages,
un/underemployment land inequality policies
biased against rural areas - environmental natural resource degradation,
natural disasters - social/political ethnic conflict/civil war
displacement marriage - Pull factors
- economic higher wages and employment, asset
(human and physical) acquisition - environmental bright lights infrastructure
- social/political safety/security, networks,
marriage
6Push and Pull
O -
O -
Origin
Intervening Obstacles natural reluctance risk cos
t of travel cultural/language govt restrictions
Destination
7Migration as an Individual Decision H-T
- The expected income hypothesis
- individuals migrate if the expected wage in the
destination minus costs of migration is greater
than the actual wage in the origin - expected wage in destination depends on actual
wages and probability of finding a job neither
may be known with certainty - costs of migration may be travel costs, visas etc
or psychic costs
8Migration as an Individual Decision H-T
- Problem 1 empirically we observe that migration
continues even though expected wage in
destination is greater than actual wage in origin
- is wage in the destination known?
- young migrants have long time horizons
- Problem 2 individuals are part of households /
families - decision to migrate may be a household decision
9Migration as a Household Decision -Stark
- Migration is a solution to fluctuations in
incomes and imperfect credit markets. - Poor (esp. rural) households are characterised by
lack of access to credit markets (loans,
insurance). - Hence very vulnerable to shocks because they
are unable to diversify activities and spread
risk across a portfolio of different
activities. - Migration is a way of spreading household risk
across rural activities (farming) and urban
activities (wage employment) - migrant is supported by family when newly arrived
in destination, then remits part of wage back to
origin - remittances from migrant can be used to smooth
consumption, to invest in farm activities or to
invest in human capital of younger children.
10Migration II
- Effects of migration on destination and origin
- wages, income and employment
- remittances
- inequality
- technological change
- population
- availability of amenities
- Readings Lipton Parnwell, Todaro OECD
111. Wages, employment and incomes
- Rural Areas
- increased demand for rural output by urban areas
rise in rural output price, in wages and incomes
rise in demand for labour - But rural productivity may fall if migrants are
young, able-bodied and educated Net effect
depends on ability of rural area to adapt and
change traditional divisions of labour tech
change - Urban areas
- Excess labour supply in urban areas
unemployment, low wages - But
- migrants may be highly educated, more productive,
create demand for labour - alleviates labour shortages at all parts of the
skills spectrum - in service sector - hotels, catering etc in
professions such as teaching and nursing in high
tech sector -computing, bio-tech
122. Remittances
- 80 million people in China classified as migrants
(rural to urban), most since 1985. - Many migrants send money home
- China 85 of migrants remit amounts up to 1/3 of
earnings - Peru receipts from migrant members form 45 of
total household income - South Africa many black households in rural
areas are almost completely dependent on migrants
remittances - Motivation
- altruism support poor parents/younger siblings
- exchange remittances are to pay for services
provided by parent household (childcare,
education, bequests and inheritance, coinsurance,
social standing)
133. Inequality
Rural Urban
Pre-industrialisation Low incomes but low
inequality
Early industrialisation Rising incomes and
rising inequality
Migration
Late industrialisation Rising incomes and
falling inequality
144. Technological Change
- Migration and urbanisation may encourage
technological innovation in order to increase
output - Technological change facilitated by remittances
- Return migrants bring new ideas
- But rural non-migrants may have less info on
(appropriate) technology brain drain from
rural areas and from developing countries to
developed countries (esp. given immigration
policies). - Remittances may be infrequent and/or small or
spent on consumption rather than invested
155. Population effects
- Effects on origin lower fertility levels, lower
education - migrants tend to be young and male
- change in cultural values of migrants
- rural populations become increasingly elderly,
with hollow households of grandparents and
grandchildren - rural populations have unequal sex ratios
- difficult to find a marriage partner
- partners absent for long time
165. Population effects
- Effects on destination
- much international migration is now by families
accompanying family members or family reunion - migrants are younger than destination population
and have higher fertility rates, although
fertility rates soon converge - moderates the effects of ageing in western
societies - immigration used in past to populate remote areas
and colonies (USA, Australia, Latin America) - current immigration policies in Australia, Canada
and New Zealand favour young migrants
176. Availability of Amenities
- Out migration eases pressure on rural amenities
BUT may lead to reduced investment in new
facilities, maintenance and service levels - Migration to urban areas increases demand for
amenities housing, health, education, transport,
water, electricity and raises land and housing
rents and values BUT often economics of scale in
provision of public amenities