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Does Migration Make Rural Households More Productive? Evidence from Mexico

J. Edward Taylor and Alejandro Lopez-Feldman

Journal of Development Studies, 2010, vol. 46, issue 1, 68-90

Abstract: The migration of labour out of rural areas and the flow of remittances from migrants to rural households are an increasingly important feature of less developed countries. This paper explores ways in which migration influences incomes and productivity of land and human capital in rural households over time, using new household survey data from Mexico. Our findings suggest that a massive increase in migration to the United States increased per-capita incomes via remittances and also by raising land productivity in migrant-sending households. They do not support the pessimistic view that migration discourages production in migrant-sending economies, nor the view implicit in separable agricultural household models that migration and remittances influence household incomes but not production.

Date: 2010
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Working Paper: Does migration make rural households more productive? Evidence from Mexico (2007) Downloads
Working Paper: Does Migration Make Rural Households More Productive? Evidence from Mexico (2007) Downloads
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DOI: 10.1080/00220380903198463

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