Type | Working Paper |
Title | International Migration and the Distribution of Schooling in the Next Generation |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://papers.ccpr.ucla.edu/papers/PWP-CCPR-2010-059/PWP-CCPR-2010-059.pdf |
Abstract | How Mexican migration to the U.S. shapes the educational attainment of the next generation has been a topic of heated debates among scholars and policy analysts in the U.S. and Mexico. In the U.S., some observers argue that Mexican migration depresses aggregate levels of education by introducing large numbers of individuals with low levels of education, who experience limited educational mobility across and within generations (Grogger and Trejo 2002; Telles and Ortiz 2008). Their opponents, however, contend that these concerns are ill founded as Mexican immigrants experience educational mobility at virtually equal rates as earlier waves of immigrants despite the unique challenges that contemporary immigrants face (Smith 2003). In Mexico, some fear that migration will give rise to “brain drain” as it selects individuals with higher levels of education (Feliciano 2005; McKenzie and Rapoport 2006; Ozden 2005). In contrast, others contend that migration enhances aggregate levels of education by increasing the availability of educational resources and promoting economic development, which generates an internal demand for higher levels of education (Antman 2007; Hanson and Woodruff 2003). Yet, all these conclusions rest on country-specific research that use simple regression models investigating the impact of parental migration affects the educational mobility across generations. Generalizing findings from these studies to the aggregate level is problematic because of two reasons. First, it focuses solely on the effects of migration that accrues due to differences in the ability and willingness of migrant and non-migrant parents to invest in their children’s educational futures. In the process, it ignores that the aggregate effects of migration also accrues through a complex set of demographic processes, including the selectivity of the migration process that encourage the cross-national move of individuals with certain 3 demographic profiles as well as the fertility differentials between non-migrants in the country of origin, immigrants, and the native born in destination countries. These interdependencies not only determine the number and types of individuals who remain or move across national boundaries, but also the relative number of offspring that the different types of parents contribute to the populations of the countries of origin and destination. Country-specific analysis also renders an incomplete assessment by ignoring processes that occur outside the scope of the country in observation. Specifically, studies examining how immigrants fare in the destination country ignore the role of migrant selectivity despite the fact that it has been identified as a key determinant of the extent and speed to which immigrants adapt educationally (Feliciano 2006). Studies on the impact of migration on sending communities cannot accurately ascertain the size of the impact of migration because they are forced to exclude migrants who are residing in destination countries. To accurately estimate the impact of migration on educational mobility, studies should explore how socio-demographic processes in the countries of origin and destination influence the size and characteristics of migratory flows. Simultaneously, they should also consider how migration affects the educational composition of the next generation by redistributing individuals with distinct fertility behaviors across the two countries and altering the availability of educational opportunities as well as their incentives for childbearing. |