Title: Determinants of migration intentions in the European Union
1Determinants of migration intentions in the
European Union
- Exodus or bounded mobility?
- Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
- Tilburg University
- The Netherlands
- ESPA Conference on Migration and Social Policies
in Europe, Universidad Pública de Navarra,
Pamplona, Spain, June 8-10, 2006 -
2Research questions
- Background
- next decade East/West migration landslide in
Europe? - new migration dynamics due to European
enlargement? - 2006 European Year of Mobility, Europeans need
to be more mobile - Crucial issue what are the social-demographic,
cultural labor related determinants of
cross-border migration intentions? - Main determinants of intended between-country
migration? - Relation to past mobility?
- New Member States and EU15?
- Barriers and triggers to intended cross-border
migration?
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
3Structure of the presentation
- 1. Theory and literature
- Push and pull factors
- Self selection effects
- 2. Basic expectations on migration intentions
- 3. Migration intention data used
- 4. Descriptive results
- 5. Modeling migration intentions
- Individual level variables
- Macro level variables
- 6. Main conclusions
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
4Theory
Ui. Utility of person i in country of origin
(A) or destination (B). Ci Costs of
migration from A to B. U depends on economic
(Ei.), demographic (Di.), and social attributes
(Si.) and their value in A and B. Utility also
depends on macro-economic condition (M). C
consists of out of pocket costs equal to all (f),
and individual costs relating to the distance of
the move (d), and psycho-cultural costs (c).
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
5Literature (1) Motives for mobility
- Pull factors
- Immediate employment and wage opportunities
(Harris Todaro, 1970) - Future employment and wage prospects (Sjaastad,
1962 Chiswick, 1978) - Social security benefits (Borjas, 1999)
- Housing market (OECD, 2005)
- Social networks (Massey et al., 1994 Zavodny,
1997 Hatton Williamson, 2002) - Demographic events (Coppin et al., 2006)
- Migration as a household decision (Mincer, 1978
Stark, 1991). - Push factors
- High unemployment and low GDP (Hatton
Williamson, 2002 Pedersen et al., 2004) - Past mobility (Liebig Sousa-Poza, 2004)
- Taxation (Boadway Wildasin, 1984)
- Social unrest.
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
6Expectations
- The intention to migrate is more likely if
- 1. Expected returns are high (higher educated)
- 2. Pay-back period for costs is long (younger
people) - 3. No children
- 4. No partner
- 5. One has positive attitudes towards migration
- 6. One has been mobile in the past
- 7. Past mobility was job-related rather than
family-related - 8. Does not perceive negative effects for
employment - 9. Does not perceive negative effects for social
ties - 10. Economic prospects in home country are bad
- 11. For the higher educated when income
inequality is low - 12.The mobility distance is relatively short
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
7Migration intention data (1)
- Eurobarometer Mobility Survey (EB 64.1)
- All 25 EU countries
- Data Sept. 2005 1,000 cases per country
- N appr. 24,500 CAPI
- Best available source on EU wide migration
intentions - Do you think that in the next five years you are
likely to move? - In the same city/town/village
- To another city/town/village but in the same
region - To another region but in the same country
- To another country in the European Union
- To another country outside the European Union
- You dont think you will move.
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
8Migration intention data (2)
- Psychological decision and attitude theory
intentions only under certain conditions predict
actual behavior (Fishbein Ajzen, 1975). - Intentions do have a predictive value for future
behavior (Manski, 1990). - We assume here that intentions are a monotonic
function of the true (unobserved) future
behavior. - Several other research use migration intentions
data - Tidrick (1971), Finifter (1976), Chiquiar and
Hanson (2002) for the US - Burda et al. (1998) for Germany
- Liebig and Sousa-Poza (2004) in an international
comparative survey - Krieger (2004) for accessing and candidate EU
countries.
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
9Descriptive results (1) Intention to migrate to
another EU country ()
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
10Descriptive results (2) Intention to migrate by
demographics ()
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
11Migration intentions and GDP
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
12Migration intentions and GDP growth
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
13Migration intentions and long-term unemployment
rate
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
14Migration intentions of the low educated and
income inequality
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
15Migration intentions of the high educated and
income inequality
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
16Composition of the pro-migration group
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
17Model for migration intentions (1)
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
18Model for migration intentions (2)
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
19Model for migration intentions (3)
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
20Barriers and triggers to mobility
- Pro-migration intentions Men Youth
- Young people adventure seeking, exploring
experiencing new environments - Little can motivate the low educated to migrate
- Movers tend to stay movers pro-migration
attitudes - Perceived erosion of social networks
- Language barriers
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
21Conclusions
- Exodus?
- Long distance residential migration is not a
widespread phenomenon in terms of percentages - But potentially large absolute numbers (e.g.
Poland EU migration intention of 7) - Especially higher educated workers / students
(brain drain?). - Bounded mobility?
- Past experience with mobility
- Job/income opportunities are drivers
- Demographics (children), social ties, and
language are main barriers
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester
22Conclusions
- The future of cross-border EU migration
- Age, period or cohort?
- A cognitive experiment
Didier Fouarge Peter Ester