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CONCEPTUALISING INTERNATIONAL HIGH­SKILLED MIGRATION

Christopher Parsons, Sebastien Rojon and Lena Wettach
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Sebastien Rojon: VU University Amsterdam
Lena Wettach: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology

No 15-33, Economics Discussion / Working Papers from The University of Western Australia, Department of Economics

Abstract: Pinning down a definition of high-skilled migration is a complex issue. The resulting ambiguity hinders the measurement of human capital, stymies meaningful international comparisons of the mobility of skills and undermines the evaluation of immigration policies. In this paper, we adopt three alternative stances to conceptualise high-skilled migration: from the perspective of those responsible for recording immigrants at the country level, from the standpoint of the methodologies that underpin countries’ occupational nomenclatures and lastly an inductive approach that classifies high skilled migrants based upon nations’ unilateral immigration policies. Each of the three approaches is contentious such that we identify three major discordances: a definitional discordance whereby the same individual may be deemed as more or less skilled depending upon the variables used to define them, an occupational discordance whereby the same individual may be classified as highly skilled or not depending upon the occupational classification used to record them and a policy discordance whereby the skills of individuals in the same profession are valued differently by nation states depending upon the prevailing migration policies. We discuss all three discordances in detail, before making recommendations to remedy them, thereby bringing clarity to scholars and policy makers alike.

Pages: 26 pages
Date: 2015
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mig
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