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      Eight questions about brain drain

      Gibson, John; McKenzie, David
      DOI
       10.1257/jep.25.3.107
      Link
       www.aeaweb.org
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      Citation
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      Gibson, J. & McKenzie, D. (2011). Eight questions about brain drain. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 25(3), 107-128.
      Permanent Research Commons link: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/5884
      Abstract
      The term "brain drain" dominates popular discourse on high-skilled migration, and for this reason, we use it in this article. However, as Harry Johnson noted, it is a loaded phrase implying serious loss. It is far from clear that such a loss actually occurs in practice; indeed, there is an increasing recognition of the possible benefits that skilled migration can offer both for migrants and for sending countries. This paper builds upon a recent wave of empirical research to answer eight key questions underlying much of the brain drain debate: 1) What is brain drain? 2) Why should economists care about it? 3) Is brain drain increasing? 4) Is there a positive relationship between skilled and unskilled migration? 5) What makes brain drain more likely? 6) Does brain gain exist? 7) Do high-skilled workers remit, invest, and share knowledge back home? 8) What do we know about the fiscal and production externalities of brain drain?
      Date
      2011
      Type
      Journal Article
      Publisher
      American Economic Association
      Collections
      • Management Papers [1136]
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