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Do Income Differentials Influence the Flow of Migrant Workers from the Philippines?

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  • Eduardo T. Gonzales

    (Fellow, Development Academy of the Philippines)

Abstract

The emigration of Filipino workers is explained with an "international" variant of Harris-Todaro migration mode for developing countries. It is hypothesized that the decision to emigrate is the function of the expected income differential between the origin and destination countries, net of moving costs (intermediation expense, transportation costs). Using a log-linear emigration function and employing data from the 1988 Philippine national demographic survey, regression results suggest that the higher the income differential (and the lower the moving costs), the higher the tendency to emigrate. In order to stem the flow of Filipino technical and professional workers and avoid critical shortages in the supply of skills and services, an appropriate policy choice is to provide subsidy-financed incentives that would require "keying" wages to concrete performance standards at the firm level, That should spur a "newly-industrializing" type of growth—which is the key to minimizing serious imbalances in economic opportunities between the Philippines and other countries.

Suggested Citation

  • Eduardo T. Gonzales, 1995. "Do Income Differentials Influence the Flow of Migrant Workers from the Philippines?," Philippine Review of Economics, University of the Philippines School of Economics and Philippine Economic Society, vol. 32(1), pages 79-97, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:phs:prejrn:v:32:y:1995:i:1:p:79-97
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    File URL: http://pre.econ.upd.edu.ph/index.php/pre/article/view/119/480
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