Capital humain et compétences migrantes

Human capital is referred to as the stock of habits, knowledge, social and personality attributes and skills that are embodied in an individual’s ability to perform labor and thus to produce economic value. The (non-)movement and transfer of human capital may have an influence on the sending and/or receiving context.

The studies listed under this topic include literature on human capital accumulation, the relationship between social capital, human capital and employment, brain circulation, wage and gender gaps, labor market inequalities, and (international) transferability of human capital.

Showing page of 1,967 results, sorted by

Migration and human capital: Self-selection of indentured servants to the Americas

Authors Ran Abramitzky, Fabio Braggion
Year 2006
Journal Name JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
2 Journal Article

Anticipating the citizenship premium: before and after effects of immigrant naturalisation on employment

Authors Floris Peters, Maarten Vink, Hans Schmeets
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
4 Journal Article

Migration and Human Capital

Authors Gabriel Felbermayr
Year 2010
Journal Name Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
5 Journal Article

Exploring of the Human Capital Depreciation of Ukrainian Labor Migrants Abroad: Results of a Survey

Authors Oksana Koshulko
Journal Name International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
9 Journal Article

The international transferability of immigrants’ human capital

Authors Barry R. Chiswick, Paul W. Miller
Year 2009
Journal Name Economics of Education Review
Citations (WoS) 118
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10 Journal Article

Human Capital Outflow and Economic Misery: Fresh Evidence for Pakistan

Authors Amjad Ali, Nooreen Mujahid, Yahya Rashid, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11 Journal Article

On human capital formation with exit options

Authors Eliakim Katz, Hillel Rapoport
Year 2005
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 9
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
13 Journal Article

RETURN MIGRANT STATUS AND INCOME ATTAINMENT IN PUERTO-RICO

Authors CG MUSCHKIN, GC MYERS
Year 1993
Journal Name SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC STUDIES
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
16 Journal Article

The Human Capital (Schooling) of Immigrants in America

Year 2015
Book Title Handbook of the Economics of International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
17 Book Chapter

Human capital and ethnic self-identification of immigrants

Authors Laura Zimmermann, Liliya Gataullina, Amelie Constant, ...
Year 2008
Journal Name Economics Letters
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
18 Journal Article

The effect of emigration on human capital formation

Authors Jean-Pierre Vidal
Year 1998
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 113
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
19 Journal Article

Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union

Authors David Owen
Book Title Debating Transformations of National Citizenship
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
21 Book Chapter

Escaping Europe: health and human capital of Holocaust refugees

Authors Matthias Blum, Claudia Rei
Year 2018
Journal Name EUROPEAN REVIEW OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
24 Journal Article

Health, human capital, and African-American migration before 1910

Authors Trevon D. Logan
Year 2009
Journal Name EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
25 Journal Article

Introduction: Immigration and Its Impact on Human Capital Development

Authors Meghna Sabharwal
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
27 Journal Article

HUMAN-CAPITAL AND THE PREFAMINE IRISH EMIGRATION TO ENGLAND

Authors S NICHOLAS, PR SHERGOLD
Year 1987
Journal Name EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
28 Journal Article

Aspirations of Migrants and Returns to Human Capital Investment

Authors Sung Soo Lim
Year 2018
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
29 Journal Article

Human capital, investment and migration in an integrated Europe

Authors Michael Burda, Charles Wyplosz
Year 1992
Journal Name European Economic Review
Citations (WoS) 15
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
30 Journal Article

Immigration, human capital and growth in the host country

Authors Juan Dolado, Alessandra Goria, Andrea Ichino
Year 1994
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32 Journal Article

Growth effects of nineteenth-century mass migrations: "Fome Zero" for Brazil?

Authors Yvonne Stolz, Joerg Baten, Tarcisio Botelho
Year 2013
Journal Name EUROPEAN REVIEW OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
34 Journal Article

The Impact of Immigration on the Human Capital of Natives

Authors Carmel U. Chiswick
Year 1989
Journal Name Journal of Labor Economics
Citations (WoS) 11
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
35 Journal Article

Dynamic Modeling of Labor Market Mobility and Human Capital Accumulation

Description
In today’s globalized world, labor mobility is at the core of the political debate and a centerpiece for economic policy. The design of migration policies, such as selective, skill-biased, immigration policies, policies to encourage the integration of immigrants, or ones that facilitate geographical mobility to increase labor market opportunities of disadvantaged workers, requires a good understanding of a more fundamental issue: understanding the role of internal migration and immigration in shaping the career paths and human capital accumulation of workers. This project aims at providing a coherent analysis that allows us to understand the interactions between labor mobility and human capital accumulation, and their implications for economic policy design. This project focuses on three main issues: labor mobility, labor market effects of immigration, and the interaction between the two. Our questions are: (a) What are the role of temporary and permanent contracts in shaping career paths and geographic mobility of workers? (b) Does the forgone human capital accumulation during a recession produce a lost generation? Is this alleviated by geographical mobility? (c) What is the role of geographical and occupational mobility in spreading or containing the effects of technological progress on wage inequality? (d) To what extent selective immigration policies maximize native workers’ prospects and wellbeing? (e) How can we increase degree of assimilation of immigrants? To address these questions, we will develop dynamic equilibrium models that explicitly characterize human capital accumulation decisions of workers and how these decisions interact with migration. Our proposed models will introduce rich labor market structures and a variety of economic shocks. They will require the implementation of novel estimation methods, which we will also develop. The estimated models will be used to evaluate and design key economic policies for the labor market.
Year 2018
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
36 Project

Auswirkungen sozialer Netzwerke auf Humankapitalinvestitionen und Lohnkonvergenz von Zuwanderern

Principal investigator Agnese Romiti (Principal Investigator), Parvati Trübswetter (Principal Investigator), Ehsan Vallizadeh (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Die Integration von Migranten ist einer der großen arbeitsmarktpolitischen Herausforderungen in Deutschland. Während 72% der 25 bis 64 Jährigen ohne Migrationshintergrund erwerbstätig sind, sind in Deutschland lebende Ausländer nur zu 53% erwerbstätig. Bei den Personen mit Migrationshintergrund oder mit eigener Migrationserfahrung liegt der Anteil bei 59%. Auf der Grundlage der neuen IAB-SOEP Migrationsstichprobe soll die Arbeitsmarktentwicklung der Migranten anhand arbeitsmarktrelevanter Indikatoren wie Erwerbsstatus sowie Beschäftigungs- und Lohnentwicklung analysiert und die möglichen Determinanten hinsichtlich einer Angleichung bzw. einer Divergenz zu Personen ohne Migrationshintergrund untersucht werden. Eine erfolgreiche Integration von Migranten in den Arbeitsmarkt hängt von vielen Faktoren ab. Es ist bekannt, dass Faktoren wie das Bildungsniveau, die Sprachkenntnisse, oder die Anerkennung von Abschlüssen die Arbeitsmarkt- und Lohnentwicklung von Migranten positiv beeinflussen. Weniger bekannt sind hingegen die Determinanten, die wiederum diese Faktoren beeinflussen. Warum investieren beispielsweise bestimmte Migrantengruppen mehr in Bildung und Spracheals andere? Das Ziel des ersten Teilprojekts ""Lohnkonvergenz von Zuwanderern"" ist, die Auswirkung von sozialen Netzwerken und Risikopräferenzen auf die Humankapitalinvestition von Migranten zu untersuchen. Es gibt Hinweise, dass ein gutes soziales Umfeld, insbesondere das ethnische Netzwerk, eine positive Auswirkung auf die Investitionsentscheidung hinsichtlich Aus- und Weiterbildung und Sprache haben. Auf der anderen Seite können auch rationale nutzenmaximierende Konsumentscheidungen maßgeblich das Investitionsverhalten der Individuen beeinflussen. Für die empirische Analyse wird die neue IAB-SOEP Migrationsstichprobe zusammen mit administrativen Daten der Integrierten Erwerbsbiografien (IEB) herangezogen. Projektziel Wir untersuchen die Auswirkung von sozialen Netzwerken und Risikopräferenzen auf die Humankapitalinvestition und die Lohnentwicklung von Migranten."
Year 2014
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
37 Project

Shadow Labor: Work and Wages among Immigrant Hispanic Women in Durham, North Carolina

Authors Chenoa A. Flippen
Year 2016
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
40 Journal Article

"Use it or lose it!" How do migration, human capital and the labour market interact in the Western Balkans?

Authors Isilda Mara, Michael Landesmann
Description
The six Western Balkan countries (hereafter ‘the WB6’) are quite well-researched in terms of migration, human capital and labour market issues. However, most studies have focused on one of these three individual topics rather than addressing them together, thus missing the skills-related interactions between these various fields. Aiming to understand the impact of migration on the skills pool and skill utilisation in the WB6, and the implications it may have for their future economic development, the ETF’s project ‘Migration and human capital in the Western Balkans’ brought together the three areas under an integrated analytical framework. This report is the last of a series of country studies (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo1, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia) and technical papers undertaken within the project during 2020–21. It is a regional assessment of the triangular relationships amongst migration, labour market dynamics and human capital development over the past decade, with cross-country comparisons.
Year 2022
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
41 Report

MIGRATION PROCESSES IN FORMING THE EFFICIENT HUMAN CAPITAL OF THE FORMER SOVIET UNION

Authors Svetlana Grinenko, Tatyana Yu Anopchenko, Elena K. Zadorozhnyaya, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42 Journal Article

The use of social and human capital among Canadian business immigrants

Authors Martin N. Marger
Year 2001
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
44 Journal Article

Chicano Return Migration to the Southwest: An Integrated Human Capital Approach

Authors Rogelio Saenz, Alberto Davila
Year 1992
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 12
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45 Journal Article

Methodological Aspects of Research on Flows Human Capital Flows: A survey

Authors Alessandra VENTURINI
Description
The objective of this critical and methodological survey is economic research on migration issues among European and more generally among Anglo-Saxon scholars and to focus on the themes which could be usefully expanded upon in analyses of migration from and to the CIS countries. The survey covers in a very unbalanced way the three main migration research areas: the migration choice, which attempt to answer the question: why people move; the effects of immigration in the country of destination and its implication for migration policies and the effect of emigration for the country of origin the most challenging and least developed of these three. For all areas the main economic approaches and the variables use, the methodoly and the main results are reported. More attention is devoted to the research field which seems most relevant for the CIS countries and the methodological focus is meaning to make the text as understandable as possible to all social scientists, not only to a small circle of econometric addicted.
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
47 Report

Migration, remittances and accumulation of human capital with endogenous debt constraints

Authors Nicolas Destree, Karine Gente, Carine Nourry
Year 2021
Journal Name Mathematical Social Sciences
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49 Journal Article
SHOW FILTERS
Ask us