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Emigrant or Sojourner? Migration Intensity and Its Determinants
Abstract: This
Working Paper develops the concept of 'migration intensity'--the degree
to which a migrant shifts his attachment, association and engagement from his
place of origin to the migration destination. Among male Mexican migrants to the United States, Kaufmann finds strong
complementarities among remittances, migration patterns, and localized
investments in physical, social and human capital. Based on these, he derives an Index of Migration Intensity (IMI). The IMI reveals that the majority of Mexicans have low levels of migration intensity, but migration intensity has
been growing over time. Migration intensity varies as expected:
education, prior migration experience, foreign family ties, and original
residence in communities with few economic opportunities all promote higher migration
intensity. From the standpoint of sending countries, low migration intensity has
the desirable effects of enhancing positive financial transfers and mitigating the
resource losses connected to the human outflow. From the standpoint of
receiving countries, low migration intensity may also be desirable, depending on
policy goals.
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