We estimate the aggregate productivity gains from reducing barriers to internal labor migration in Indonesia, accounting for worker selection and spatial differences in human capital. We distinguish between movement costs, which mean workers will move only if they expect higher wages, and amenity differences, which mean some locations must pay more to attract workers. We find modest but important aggregate impacts. We estimate a 22 percent increase in labor productivity from removing all barriers. Reducing migration costs to the US level, a high-mobility benchmark, leads to a 7.1 percent productivity boost. These figures hide substantial heterogeneity. The origin population that benefits most sees a 104 percent increase in average earnings ...
Using Indonesian plant-level manufacturing data for 1996 and 2006, this study estimates the external...
The article compares and contrasts the scale and composition of workers’ outflow and remittance flow...
Are return migrants more productive than non-migrants? If so, is it a causal effect or simply self-...
We estimate the aggregate productivity gains from reducing barriers to internal labor migration in I...
We study the labor market effects of domestic migration in Indonesia. To address the endogeneity of ...
Migration and regional inequality are two interrelated concepts. Inequality between regions can lead...
We use a natural experiment in Indonesia to provide causal evidence on the role of location-specific...
This article studies the consequences of restrictions to migration at the origin on labor market out...
For countries with significant labor force like China, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan etc. any long-run...
Migration is an unavoidable problem for economic development in third world countries. Indonesia is ...
The rapid development of technology and globalization has resulted in rapid economic growth in devel...
This paper contains three important contributions to the literature on international migrations. Fir...
Are migrants more productive workers than nonmigrants? Such a comparison concerns both observed and ...
International labor mobility in Southeast Asia has risen drastically in recent decades and is expect...
Using Indonesian plant-level manufacturing data for 1996 and 2006, this study estimates the external...
The article compares and contrasts the scale and composition of workers’ outflow and remittance flow...
Are return migrants more productive than non-migrants? If so, is it a causal effect or simply self-...
We estimate the aggregate productivity gains from reducing barriers to internal labor migration in I...
We study the labor market effects of domestic migration in Indonesia. To address the endogeneity of ...
Migration and regional inequality are two interrelated concepts. Inequality between regions can lead...
We use a natural experiment in Indonesia to provide causal evidence on the role of location-specific...
This article studies the consequences of restrictions to migration at the origin on labor market out...
For countries with significant labor force like China, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan etc. any long-run...
Migration is an unavoidable problem for economic development in third world countries. Indonesia is ...
The rapid development of technology and globalization has resulted in rapid economic growth in devel...
This paper contains three important contributions to the literature on international migrations. Fir...
Are migrants more productive workers than nonmigrants? Such a comparison concerns both observed and ...
International labor mobility in Southeast Asia has risen drastically in recent decades and is expect...
Using Indonesian plant-level manufacturing data for 1996 and 2006, this study estimates the external...
The article compares and contrasts the scale and composition of workers’ outflow and remittance flow...
Are return migrants more productive than non-migrants? If so, is it a causal effect or simply self-...