Migration and Knowledge Diffusion: The Effect of Returning Refugees on Export Performance in the Former Yugoslavia
Journal article: During the early 1990s Germany offered temporary protection to 700,000 Yugoslavian refugees fleeing war. By 2000, many had been repatriated. We exploit this natural experiment to investigate the role of returning migrants in boosting export performance upon their return. Using confidential German administrative data we find that industries with 10% more returning refugees exhibit larger exports between the pre- and post-war periods by 1 to 1.6%. We use exogenous allocation rules for asylum seekers within Germany as an instrument to deal with endogeneity concerns. We show evidence pointing to productivity shifts as the main mechanism behind our results. Consistently, we find our results are driven by refugees in occupations more apt to transfer knowledge, technologies and best-practices.
Author(s)
Dany Bahar, Andreas Hauptmann, Cem Ozguzel, Hillel Rapoport
Journal
- Review of Economics and Statistics
Date of publication
- 2024
Keywords JEL
Keywords
- Migration
- Refugees
- Knowledge diffusion
- Management
- Exports
- Productivity
Pages
- 287-304
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1
Volume
- 106