Abstract

Immigration is a controversial topic that draws much debate. From a human sustainability perspective, immigration is disadvantageous for home countries causing brain drains. Ample evidence suggests the developed host countries benefit from immigration in terms of diversification, culture, learning, and brain gains, yet less is understood for emerging countries. The purpose of this paper is to examine the presence of brain gains due to immigration for emerging countries, and explore any gaps as compared to developed countries. Using global data from 88 host and 109 home countries over the period from 1995 to 2015, we find significant brain gains due to immigration for emerging countries. However, our results show that there is still a significant brain gain gap between emerging and developed countries. A brain gain to the developed host countries is about 5.5 times greater than that of the emerging countries. The results hold after addressing endogeneity, self-selection, and large sample biases. Furthermore, brain gain is heterogenous by immigrant types. Skilled or creative immigrants tend to benefit the host countries about three times greater than the other immigrants. In addition, the Top 10 destination countries seem to attract the most creative people, thus harvest the most out of the talented immigrants. In contrast, we find countries of origin other than the Top 10 seem to send these creative people to the rest of the world.

Highlights

  • Innovation and technological advancement are building blocks for the long-term sustainable growth and productivity of an economy (Aghion and Howitt 1992; Jones 1995; Romer 1990)

  • Who are the immigrants to emerging countries, and how much gains they bring to the host country in comparison to the developed countries are not well understood

  • In a cross-country context, over the last two decades, we find the presence of brain gains for emerging countries

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Summary

Introduction

Innovation and technological advancement are building blocks for the long-term sustainable growth and productivity of an economy (Aghion and Howitt 1992; Jones 1995; Romer 1990). The world is competing to attract the brightest minds and the labor market for them has become increasingly mobile. The global immigrant stock was 145.1 million in 1990, yet by the year 2019, it reached 261.8 million, which is 3.4% of the total global population, and 1.8 times more than three decades ago. Immigration policies in the U.S through its. H1B program, in UK and Canada through their point systems target to attract the selective skilled groups who can meaningfully contribute to the development. Immigrants make noticeable contributions to science and innovation.

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