This research was motivated by the increasing number of foreign students and scientists who are in the United States on temporary visas and who are able to change their status to permanent immigrant. Origin countries, among them industrialized western European nations, are concerned about losing many of their best-educated and most talented citizens. This article modifies and extends a theoretical model of optimal human capital investment before and after migration to shed new light on the emigration/immigration of the highly skilled, and explores some possible implications for the study of the so-called ‘brain drain’ phenomenon
A two-country, two-period model of international migration highlights microeconomic foundations for ...
Using new data on emigration rates by education level, we examine the impact of brain drain migratio...
Brain drain effects of migration has been studied extensively. Ability drain has not. While data con...
The worldwide race to attract talents is getting tougher. The US has been leading the race, with its...
When speaking about the total number of highly educated individuals’ migration, it is easy to spot t...
For nearly four decades now, the conventional wisdom has been that the migration of human capital (s...
This paper tests the hypothesis of a beneficial brain drain using occupation-specific data on migrat...
The debate over the effect of human capital flight on educational attainment in immigrants' source c...
This paper analyzes the relationship between brain drain, human capital accumulation and individual ...
This paper analyzes international high-skilled migration caused by financial frictions in educationa...
In this paper, we model a developing economy in which individual decisions about education and migra...
The outmigration of highly educated people from a country is what's known as a "brain drain," and it...
Recent theoretical studies suggest that migration prospects can raise the expected return to human c...
Brain drain has long been a common concern for migrant-sending countries, particularly for small cou...
In recent years, governments around the world have shown increasing concerns about brain drain, the ...
A two-country, two-period model of international migration highlights microeconomic foundations for ...
Using new data on emigration rates by education level, we examine the impact of brain drain migratio...
Brain drain effects of migration has been studied extensively. Ability drain has not. While data con...
The worldwide race to attract talents is getting tougher. The US has been leading the race, with its...
When speaking about the total number of highly educated individuals’ migration, it is easy to spot t...
For nearly four decades now, the conventional wisdom has been that the migration of human capital (s...
This paper tests the hypothesis of a beneficial brain drain using occupation-specific data on migrat...
The debate over the effect of human capital flight on educational attainment in immigrants' source c...
This paper analyzes the relationship between brain drain, human capital accumulation and individual ...
This paper analyzes international high-skilled migration caused by financial frictions in educationa...
In this paper, we model a developing economy in which individual decisions about education and migra...
The outmigration of highly educated people from a country is what's known as a "brain drain," and it...
Recent theoretical studies suggest that migration prospects can raise the expected return to human c...
Brain drain has long been a common concern for migrant-sending countries, particularly for small cou...
In recent years, governments around the world have shown increasing concerns about brain drain, the ...
A two-country, two-period model of international migration highlights microeconomic foundations for ...
Using new data on emigration rates by education level, we examine the impact of brain drain migratio...
Brain drain effects of migration has been studied extensively. Ability drain has not. While data con...