2014/08 | LEM Working Paper Series | |
Human-Mobility Networks, Country Income, and Labor Productivity
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Giorgio Fagiolo and Gianluca Santoni |
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Keywords | ||
Temporary human-mobility network; International technological diffusion; Per-capita income; Productivity; Openness to mobility and trade; Centrality.
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JEL Classifications | ||
O33, O47, C21, C26, F22
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Abstract | ||
This paper asks whether the level of integration of world countries in
the international network of temporary human mobility can explain
differences in their per-capita income and labor productivity. We
disentangle the role played by global country centrality in the
network from traditional openness measures, which only account for
local, nearest- neighbor linkages through which ideas and knowledge
can flow. Using 1995-2010 data, we show that global country centrality
in the temporary human-mobility network enhances both per-capita
income and labor productivity. Our results hold cross-sectionally, as
well as in a dynamic-panel estimation, and take into account potential
endogeneity issues. Our findings imply that how close a country is to
the theoretical technological frontier, depends not only on how much
she is open to temporary human mobility, but mostly on whether she is
embedded in a web of relationships connecting her with other
influential partners in the network. Our exercises also suggest that
most of the gain in income and productivity can be attained if country
centrality in the network comes mostly from influential partners that
lie not too far away from, but neither too close to them in the
network.
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