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

GEP 2024/05: Tax incentives and return migration

Abstract

Brain drain is a key policy concern for many countries. In this paper we study whether tax incentives are an effective policy to attract high-skilled expatriates back to their home country, exploiting a generous income tax break for Italian returnees. Using administrative data and a Triple Differences design, we find that eligible individuals are 27% more likely to return to Italy. Additionally, we uncover significant effects throughout the wage distribution, revealing that tax-induced migration is a broad phenomenon beyond top earners. A cost-benefit analysis shows that the tax scheme can pay for itself by targeting young high-skilled individuals.

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Authors

Jacopo Bassetto and Giuseppe Ippedico 

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Posted on Thursday 10th October 2024

Nottingham Centre for Research on Globalisation and Economic Policy

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