Type | Working Paper - UCLA Anderson School of Management Working Paper |
Title | Migration and economic growth in China: The role of knowledge and human capital spillovers |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://164.67.163.139/Documents/areas/ctr/ziman/2010-03.pdf |
Abstract | We apply a skill-based directional migration model to examine the importance of knowledge and human capital spillovers to China’s economic development. Those spillovers augment private investment in idea discovery and human capital and are central to modern theories of spatial equilibrium and endogenous economic growth (Romer 1986 and 1990, Lucas 1988 and 2004, and Glaeser and Gottleib 2009). Upon accounting for regional differentials in skill-based compensation, cost-of-living, and natural and other amenities, model estimation indicates that high-skill migrants attach significant importance to knowledge and human capital spillovers arising from FDI and human capital concentration in destination regions. Among low-skill migrants, the importance of spillover effects is considerably damped, reflecting institutional and other barriers to social interactions and human capital investment in destination cities. Findings provide new insights as regards the failure of labor migration to alleviate persistent regional disparities in China’s economic development. Moreover, results suggest important potential welfare gains for low-skill migrants associated with moves that provide greater access to spillover benefits. |
» | China - National Population Census 1990 |
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