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L. HOTEL. CITIZENSHIP ASCENSION AND EXODUS. Don DeVoretz Simon Fraser University. Immigration Triangle. Neo-classical model of movement no longer valid Immigration policy and globalization have added choice of movement at each stage
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L HOTEL CITIZENSHIP ASCENSION AND EXODUS Don DeVoretz Simon Fraser University
Immigration Triangle • Neo-classical model of movement no longer valid • Immigration policy and globalization have added choice of movement at each stage • Economic incentives for decision to move or to stay altered by • a. human capital investment • b. state subsidies • c. public good entitlements with citizenship
Triangular Movement • A-B: Sender to entrepot country (Canada) • Entrepot supplies subsidized • general human capital (language, job market) • specific human capital (certification, credential recognition) • public goods (citizenship, public health, education) • Entrepot attracts risk-adverse immigrant from country A • A-C: Sender to no-welfare host • Host country • supplies: - little or no subsided human capital - public goods: citizenship • attractsrisk takers: Borjas country
Mobility choices • Immigrant as myopic maximizer • who at each point must make a decision to stay or to move: if the discounted income and amenities at present location > alternatives, stay; otherwise, move • Possibilities • A-B stay; majority are risk-adverse • A-C stay; majority are risk takers • A-A; return migrant who failed or succeeded • A-B-C; risk-adverse onward movement 5
Four Stages • Stage I: Move or stay in sending country • Stage II: Stay in B or move on to A or C • Period 1: entrepot country offers advanced forms of general human capital ( enhanced language training, certification, credential recognition, bridge training, etc.) more or less portable across economies • Period 2: Period of integration (2-15 years or never for citizenship) • Agent 2 offers citizenship • Stage III: Post-citizenship • Accept and stay or move on • Reject and stay or return home • Stage IV: Choice of final destination
Economic Impact of Citizenship Case I: Overachievers
Economic Impact of Citizenship • Large for all four cases? • Why? • Third stage of self-selection • accumulates human capital prior to ascension • labour market barriers removed • end of discrimination? • rate of return on human capital rises • To stay or move? • Compare post-citizenship earnings to ROW
Economic Impact of Citizenship Case II: Cross-over
Some Trends Few countries show outmigration, and those that do have rates in the double digits: Old Vintage: (Table 1) Post-1960-1996 arrivals New Vintage: (Table 2) Post-1996-2000 arrivals
Positive or Adverse Selection of Canadian Citizens Abroad? • Canadians in the United States: • Strong positive selection for naturalized Canadians: • U.S. resident Chinese-Canadians: + US$56,695 • “ “ Indo-Canadians: US$58,050 • sub-samples respectively exceed income of all Americans and Canadian-born Canadians • No positive selection for Canadian-born Canadians • Canadians in Hong-Kong: • Strong positive selection for naturalized Canadians • 50% naturalized Canadians with post-secondary education vs. 25% of Hong Kong stayers in Canada • although they earn less than other returnees, they earn much more than Hong Kong-born stayers in Canada
HOTEL Conclusions • Strong evidence of positive sorting for at least two groups and the triangular model of immigration and citizenship ascension • Intervention? • majority of immigrants have not left • both Canadian-born and naturalized Canadians form the majority of exodus; to date, limited policy response to traditional ‘brain drain’ issue • cause for concern: “checking out anytime you like, but never leaving” = retirement with large social benefits • Some possible policy responses: • tax worldwide income − restrict citizenship inheritance − differential passport fees − provident funds
The END Welcome to Canada!