Papers
AER2026

Abundance from Abroad: Migrant Income and Long-Run Economic Development

Gaurav Khanna, Emir Murathanoglu, Caroline Theoharides, Dean Yang

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-04-01
Primary source
AER
TL;DR

We study how international migrant income prospects affect long-run development in origin areas.

AEREducationLaborStructural
Metadata matches
Sources
AER
Fields
EducationLabor
Methods and data
Structural
Abstract

We study how international migrant income prospects affect long-run development in origin areas. We leverage the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis exchange rate shocks in a shift-share identification strategy across Philippine provinces. Initial migrant income shocks are magnified six-fold over time, increasing domestic income, education levels, migrant skills, and high-skilled migration. Remarkably, 74.9 percent of long-run income gains come from domestic rather than migrant income. Trade driven impacts of exchange rate shocks are orthogonal to effects via migrant income. A structural model reveals that 19.7 percent of long-run income gains stem from educational investments. International migration fosters broad economic development in origin communities. (JEL F22, F31, G01, J24, J82, O15, O16)

Source versions
AER2026-04-01
American Economic Review 116(4):1540-1577
10.1257/aer.20241465
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