Overview
We bring to bear a novel dataset covering the employment
history of about 450 million individuals from 180 countries to
study return migration and the impact of skilled international
migration on human capital stocks across countries. Return
migration is a common phenomenon, with 38% of skilled
migrants returning to their origin countries within 10 years.
Return migration is significantly correlated with industry
growth in the origin and destination countries, and is
asymmetrically exposed to negative firm employment growth.
Using an AKM-style model, we identify worker and
country-firm fixed effects, as well as the returns to experience
and education by location and current workplace. For
workers in emerging economies, the returns to a year of
experience in the United States are 57-200% higher than a
year of experience in the origin country. Migrants to
advanced economies are positively selected on ability relative
to stayers, while within this migrant population, returnees
exhibit lower ability. Simulations suggest that eliminating
skilled international migration would have highly
heterogeneous effects across countries, adjusting total
(average) human capital stocks within a range of -50% to 30%
(-2% to 3%).