Nottingham Centre for Research on
Globalisation and Economic Policy (GEP)

GEP 12/06: On the Political Economy of High Skilled Migration and International Trade

Summary

This paper analyses the political economy of migration and trade within a heterogeneous skills worker framework.

Abstract

We develop a two-country, two-sector model with a continuum of workers to address the link between migration and trade where policy is determined by a simple referendum. In particular, we address two questions. First, are states already in free trade areas more likely to support full integration than states without free trade? Second, is trade liberalization more likely to be supported by a simultaneous referendum on trade and migration than in one on trade alone? The key to our analysis is the recognition that for free trade, migration, or trade and migration to be adopted, the relevant policy must pass the referendum in both countries. We identify conditions under which that occurs. Our model provides an interpretation of the evolution of the politics of economic integration related to NAFTA and European Union.

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Authors

Spiros Bougheas and Doug Nelson

 

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Posted on Friday 1st June 2012

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