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Telemigration and development: On the offshorability of teleworkable jobs

Richard Baldwin and Jonathan Dingel

No 16641, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research

Abstract: The Covid-19 pandemic has introduced huge numbers of employers and employees to remote work. How many of these newly remote jobs will go overseas? We offer a rough quantification based on two observations: 1) offshore work is trade in services, and 2) the number of telemigrants is the volume of this trade divided by the average wage. Combining these with gravity-model estimates, we can roughly predict the number of new telemigrants that would arise from lower barriers to trade in services. Telemigration seems unlikely to be transformative when it comes to the development paths of most emerging economies. The baseline service trade flows are modest, and the standard gravity model restricts modest changes to have modest impacts. There are no tipping points in structural gravity models. Finally, we propose a simple model of telemigration in which small changes can have large consequences. The key is to assume that latent comparative advantage takes a different shape than typically assumed in quantitative trade models. Given this, small changes in trade costs can generate large and asymmetric increases in the exports of service tasks from low-wage nations.

Keywords: Telemigration; Service-led development; Offshoring; Service trade (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J1 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021-10
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