Migration and development

Fredrik Segerfeldt argues that migration benefits not only migrants from developing countries but also the family and friends that they leave behind. The idea of 'brain drain,' that the outward flow of the best and brightest inhabitants of a developing country adversely affects that country's prospects, is not borne out in the empirical data, while remittances are shown to significantly ameliorate poverty. 

Read the report.

Previous
Previous

The UK and the World in 2050

Next
Next

The New Aristocrats - a cultural and economic analysis of the new status signaling