what are the positive impacts of emigration on the home country
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-> If one leaves his home country to study abroad, he returns with a lot of expertise in the field which benefits the home country's economy.
-> Emigration helps to reduce the unemployment in one's home country.
-> It increases the income of other workers.
-> It reduces the country's population if it's overpopulated.
HOPE IT HELPS! ^_^
-> Emigration helps to reduce the unemployment in one's home country.
-> It increases the income of other workers.
-> It reduces the country's population if it's overpopulated.
HOPE IT HELPS! ^_^
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7
Emigration can affect political institutions in the home country through several channels, and can affect the supply side of the quality of institutions, the demand for (better) quality institutions, as well as the interaction between the two.
On the supply side, the quality of institutions depends, to a large extent, on the availability of appropriately qualified individuals. However, should such individuals choose to leave their country at some point, a potential result could be the persistence of corrupt regimes or political instability. Indeed, individuals who decide to emigrate can be “self-selected” along a variety of dimensions.
First, emigrants can typically be positively self-selected on the basis of education. As it is plausible to suppose that individuals who are more educated tend to be more politically involved and contribute more to public policy debates, emigration is likely to negatively affect the quality of political institutions. At the same time, migration prospects might raise the incentives of individuals to invest in personal education as a means of maximizing the probability of emigrating, under the assumption that they will benefit from higher wages and a better quality of life [3], as well as use their talents more productively [4]. Such effects on the skill distribution could mitigate the negative effects of skilled emigration on political institutions, but only if a sufficiently high proportion of individuals who made such investments finally stay in their home country.
On the supply side, the quality of institutions depends, to a large extent, on the availability of appropriately qualified individuals. However, should such individuals choose to leave their country at some point, a potential result could be the persistence of corrupt regimes or political instability. Indeed, individuals who decide to emigrate can be “self-selected” along a variety of dimensions.
First, emigrants can typically be positively self-selected on the basis of education. As it is plausible to suppose that individuals who are more educated tend to be more politically involved and contribute more to public policy debates, emigration is likely to negatively affect the quality of political institutions. At the same time, migration prospects might raise the incentives of individuals to invest in personal education as a means of maximizing the probability of emigrating, under the assumption that they will benefit from higher wages and a better quality of life [3], as well as use their talents more productively [4]. Such effects on the skill distribution could mitigate the negative effects of skilled emigration on political institutions, but only if a sufficiently high proportion of individuals who made such investments finally stay in their home country.
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