End of poverty

Once you start thinking about economic growth, it is hard to think about anything else. — paraphrased version of statement by Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Lucas

Ending absolute poverty has been a Holy Grail for development economists, and many others, for the past half century. Significant progress has been made in this regard, but there are few programs or methods for which it can be reliably said that they played a significant role in ending world poverty. Among these programs is migration. Some of the key ingredients of these arguments are:

  • There is a place premium: The same person, without any change in skills or in the number of hours worked, can earn a considerably higher income in some countries than in others. Thus, migration is almost a “free lunch” for these workers. The causes for the place premium are complex, but they are believed to be some combination of economic systems, legal systems, and culture/social structure than enable better use of a person’s talents.
  • Research by Michael Clemens and others at the Center for Global Development suggests that of the people from a given source country who have moved themselves out of poverty, a significant fraction have done so through migration. For instance, among those born in Haiti who are today not in poverty, 82% escaped poverty by leaving Haiti. For more on this research, see the income per natural page and the linked research.
  • Research by Michael Clemens and others at the Center for Global Development suggests that when there is free migration between countries, there is rapid convergence between the incomes earned by people in comparable jobs. Migration plays an important role in this, both directly and via remittances and by creating a more interconnected world.

The overall effects of open borders are expected to be a one-time boost to world GDP of about 50-150%.

Among the development economists who have been promoting more open borders as an important component of the strategy against world poverty are:

Compared to most anti-poverty programs, immigration is one of the most successful, and it pays for itself. In a blog post titled Microcredit versus Immigration, David Henderson quotes from Robert Guest’s book Borderless Economics the following passage:

When people try to think of ways to ease global poverty, they seldom mention migration. They tend to instead think of things like microcredit. There is nothing wrong with microcredit (the lending of small sums of money to poor entrepreneurs). It has lifted many people out of poverty, which is why Mohammed Yunus, whose Grameen Bank pioneered this approach in Bangladesh, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. Yet, as Mr. Pritchett points out, the average gain from a lifetime of microcredit in Bangladesh is about the same as the gain from eight weeks working in the United States. After doing a quick calculation of the total benefit that Grameen Bank confers on its clients, he asks, mischievously: “If I get 3,000 Bangladeshi workers into the US, do I get the Nobel Peace Prize?”

Writings by others on migration as a tool to end or drastically reduce poverty

Addressing claims of futility

Personal reminiscences

  • World poverty by Nathan Smith, February 17, 2013, for the Open Borders blog.