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How important is selection? Experimental vs non-experimental measures of the income gains from migration

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dc.contributor.author McKenzie, David
dc.contributor.author Gibson, John
dc.contributor.author Stillman, Steven
dc.date.accessioned 2008-12-15T01:28:28Z
dc.date.available 2008-12-15T01:28:28Z
dc.date.issued 2006-03
dc.identifier.citation McKenzie, D., Gibson, J. & Stillman, S. (2006). How important is selection? Experimental vs non-experimental measures of the income gains from migration. (Department of Economics Working Paper Series, Number 3/06). Hamilton, New Zealand: University of Waikato. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10289/1638
dc.description.abstract Measuring the gain in income from migration is complicated by non-random selection of migrants from the general population, making it hard to obtain an appropriate comparison group of non-migrants. This paper uses a migrant lottery to overcome this problem, providing an experimental measure of the income gains from migration. New Zealand allows a quota of Tongans to immigrate each year with a lottery used to choose amongst the excess number of applicants. A unique survey conducted by the authors in these two countries allows experimental estimates of the income gains from migration to be obtained by comparing the incomes of migrants to those who applied to migrate, but whose names were not drawn in the lottery, after allowing for the effect of non-compliance among some of those whose names were drawn. We also conducted a survey of individuals who did not apply for the lottery. Comparing this non-applicant group to the migrants enables assessment of the degree to which non-experimental methods can provide an unbiased estimate of the income gains from migration. We find evidence of migrants being positively selected in terms of both observed and unobserved skills. As a result, non-experimental methods are found to overstate the gains from migration, by 9 to 82 percent. A good instrumental variable works best, while difference-in-differences and bias-adjusted propensity-score matching also perform comparatively well. en_US
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en
dc.relation.ispartofseries Department of Economics Working Paper Series
dc.subject migration en_US
dc.subject selection en_US
dc.subject natural experiment en_US
dc.title How important is selection? Experimental vs non-experimental measures of the income gains from migration en_US
dc.type Working Paper en_US
uow.relation.series 3/06


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