Title: The consequences of eastwest migration in Europe
1The consequences of east-west migration in Europe
- Simon Commander
- Bucharest
- 14 June 2008
2Context and questions
- Europe has experienced one of the largest
voluntary movements of people in recent times - Since 2004 big migrations westward from EU
Accession countries - as a share of population migration has ranged
from around 0.75-1.5 in Baltics, Poland and
Slovakia - Poland probably accounts for largest absolute
number of migrants at gt1m - chain process as migrants go west from Accession
8 countries, inflows from further east (e.g,
Ukraine) - most migrants are young, educated and unmarried
- What are the consequences for both sending and
receiving countries? - As yet, surprisingly little researched and/or
quantified - New EBRD research project will ask these
questions - What impact do migrants have on the receiving
economy? - Must large scale migration of the educated
constitute a brain drain? - Through what channels do receiving countries
benefit and who are the losers?
3Receiving countries case of UK
- For brevity, use only evidence from UK in this
presentation - despite huge data shortcomings
- Immigration from Accession 8 countries to the UK
has been large - For example, Worker Registration Scheme (WRS) had
500,000 registrations between 2004 - end 2006 - but WRS probably underestimates total (e.g., self
employed do not need to register) - LFS data suggests c350,000 A8 people resident in
UK by mid-2006 of which 70 had arrived since
2004 - 1 in 3 new immigrants since 2004 from A8
- They account for under 1 of working age
population but just over 7 of total immigrant
population of working age
4Receiving countries case of UK
- Most A8 immigration has been concentrated in
London and South East - Most migrants work in services (25) but also in
manufacturing (20) and construction (15) - A8 migrants tend to be young, relatively skilled
and more likely to be male - but evidence suggests matching has mostly been to
relatively low skill jobs
5Receiving countries case of UK
- Debate on economic impact of recent migration
- In short run, capital and technology are fixed so
the main impact is on the supply of labour - Impact depends on whether immigrants are
substitutes or complements - Impact on resident population depends on whether
immigrants are different re skills, education etc - Findings regarding impact on GDP per capita
suggest little or no effect - Evidence on possible externalities for example,
rising skill share density and diversity
difficult to pin down
6Receiving countries wages in UK
- Dustmann et al (2007) find that immigration has
generally had positive effect on residents wages
but not for low wage group - Magnitudes 1 increase in share of immigrants in
working age population has led to a - 0.6 increase in median wage
- 0.4 increase at 9th decile
- but 0.5 fall for 1st decile
- Group worst affected tends to comprise earlier
migrants and ethnic groups - Macroeconomic effects Blanchflower (2007)
suggests that migration growth has tended to damp
wage growth and possibly lower the NAIRU - through increased fear of unemployment due to
increases in labour supply - migrants remit to their home countries lowering
impact on domestic consumption - firms may substitute labour for capital and lower
investment demand
7Receiving countries unemployment in UK
- Several studies suggest that impact of A8
migration on near term unemployment has been
small - Blanchflower et al (2007) find that regions with
largest increases in immigration have seen
smallest rises in their unemployment rates more
opportunities attract - but measurement issues e.g., possible movement
by residents in response to migration - narrow measure of unemployment used
- even so, wide agreement that immigration has
close to zero effects in long term - Some evidence that there may have been a negative
impact on youth unemployment - resident youths may have lost out for entry-level
jobs - but correlation between incidence of immigration
and youth unemployment is weak - national minimum wage may be relevant
8Receiving countries public services, finance and
housing in UK
- Large range of estimates but general lack of
precision - depends on what costs and benefits are included
- immigrant groups very heterogeneous
- A8 immigration likely to have had a small short
run positive impact on public finances - due to composition and rules regarding access to
benefits - some evidence of localised congestion in
education and health services - impact on housing and rental prices
- house prices higher than in the absence of
immigration but probably not by much - low end rental market has not increased
disproportionately
9Sending (transition) countries
- Some basic questions need to be asked
- What are the magnitudes of migration?
- What are the characteristics of migrants?
- Is migration temporary or permanent and with what
mix? - And with what consequences for output?
- Migration should permanently reduce output
through lower labour supply - But reduction may be tempered as capital stock
may not adjust fully and K/L ratio stays higher
permanently - Also depends on the characteristics of migrants
for example, if they were inactive or unemployed
prior to moving
10Sending countries - Poland
- Wide range of estimates of magnitudes
- In 2006 up to 2 million Poles temporarily abroad
(gt2 months) or 6 of permanent residents gt15
years - reflects an increase of four percentage points
since 2002 - Budnik (2007) uses LFS data to compute flows
including migration picking up temporary migrants - Finds that transition probability from home to
foreign labour market was around 0.1
pre-Accession 0.3 after Accession - Transition probability from employment and
unemployment to emigration post-accession was
0.3 and 1.5 respectively - Return migrants (small sample) had very
significantly larger probability of finding a job
at home than unemployed or non-participants
11Poland average transition probabilities2000 -
2006
12Sending countries a brain drain?
- Partly depends on what migrants did ex ante
- Evidence from Poland is that significant number
came from unemployment or inactivity - Is migration a temporary/circulatory phenomenon?
- IPPR has produced some (weak) evidence that it is
- large number of return migrants with good
employment prospects - Rising employment and strong wage growth is
helping converge incomes to Western European
levels - Labour cost roughly doubled between 2004 and
mid-2007 - Employer data show large jumps in reported skill
shortages - For example, in construction 5 reported lack of
qualified workers in 2004 rising to nearly 50 by
2007 - Data from receiving country ends suggests much
heterogeneity across countries in terms of
durations of stays
13Sending countries a brain drain?
- Education externalities?
- migration encourages those at home to acquire
more education - subject to marginal person in education having
positive probability of migration - Probably of limited relevance in most transition
countries due to - initial conditions, including relatively high
enrolment rates and educational scores given
country income levels - But note that there is a boom in tertiary
enrolments and evidence of widespread up-skilling - in the case of Poland, gross enrolment rates
(19-24yrs) was around 18 in 1989-2003 in last
five years gt52 - but the fact that this is widespread in CEB and
SEE viz, occurring also in countries with low
migration exposures suggests factors other than
migration may dominate
14Sending countries a brain drain?
- Other possible feedbacks include
- remittances
- large in the Balkans Bosnia gt15 of GDP
- reinvestment
- knowledge and skill transfers
- diaspora and other network effects
- Research implementation
- Requires firm level questionnaires with regional
modules - Use of Labour Force Surveys