When nature rebels: international migration, climate change, and inequality

Author: Marchiori, Luca; Schumacher, Ingmar

Description: We study climate change and international migration in a two-country overlapping generations model with endogenous climate change. Our main findings are that climate change increases migration; small impacts of climate change have significant impacts on the number of migrants; a laxer immigration policy increases long-run migration, aggravates climate change, and increases north-south inequality if climate change impacts are not too small; and a greener technology reduces emissions, long-run migration, and inequality if the migrants’ impact to overall climate change is large. The preference over the policies depends on whether the policy maker targets inequality, wealth, the environment, or the number of migrants.

Subject headings: Climate change; Migration; Migrants; Inequality

Publication year: 2011

Journal or book title: Journal of Population Economics

Volume: 24

Issue: 2

Pages: 569-600

Find the full text: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00148-009-0274-3

Find more like this one (cited by): https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cites=6278908120813843422&as_sdt=1000005&sciodt=0,16&hl=en

Serial number: 3311

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