Papers
ReStat2026

Trade, Internal Migration, and Human Capital: Who Gains from India’s IT Boom?

Devaki Ghose

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-03-24
Primary source
ReStat
TL;DR

How do trade shocks affect welfare and inequality when human capital is endogenous?

ReStatEducationLabor
Metadata matches
Sources
ReStat
Fields
EducationLabor
Methods and data
Descriptive
Abstract

How do trade shocks affect welfare and inequality when human capital is endogenous? Using India’s IT boom and internal migration data, I document that IT employment and engineering enrollment increased with exports, especially in regions with larger college-age populations. I develop a spatial model featuring higher education choice and differential migration costs for college versus work. The IT boom increased welfare by 2.39%, but without educational mobility, gains would be 25% lower and regional inequality 1.5 times larger. Removing endogenous education further reduces gains by over one-third. Education policies like national scholarships could substantially reduce regional inequality from trade shocks.

Source versions
ReStat2026-03-24
The Review of Economics and Statistics:1-46
10.1162/rest.a.1734
Related papers