Abstract
Immobility puzzle in the European Union (EU) takes the form of observed level of migration within the EU being substantially less than what is expected in a union allowing free labor mobility. We use a dynamic general equilibrium model of migration in a multi-region setting with heterogeneity in sectoral compositions, productivity and endowments of productive inputs, to construct a flow network of migrants (Chakrabarti and Sengupta, Econ. Model. 61:156–168 (2017)) ([7], Economic Modelling). When tested on the US data which we consider to be a benchmark for institutional homogeneity compared to Europe, this model explains substantial part of the variation in both the nominal and relative flows of state-to-state migration under suitable calibration. On the other hand, this model explains the relative flow network of the EU well but predicts a higher nominal flow than is seen in the data, thus illustrating and quantifying the puzzle. Following the hypothesis that institutional heterogeneity across the EU countries induces frictions on such labor reallocation process, we use dyadic regression to analyze the effects of pair-wise institutional distances which capture a broad spectrum of socio-cultural and political differences between countries, on the estimated missing mass of migrants. Linguistic differences appear to be the key factor explaining the missing mass of migrants.
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Notes
- 1.
We are, of course, not considering forced migration due to political and social instability like the Syrian crisis.
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Sengupta, A., Chakrabarti, A.S. (2019). Migration Network of the European Union: Quantifying the Effects of Linguistic Frictions. In: Abergel, F., Chakrabarti, B., Chakraborti, A., Deo, N., Sharma, K. (eds) New Perspectives and Challenges in Econophysics and Sociophysics. New Economic Windows. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11364-3_7
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