The migration response to increasing temperatures

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
The migration response to increasing temperatures
Abstract
Climate change, especially the warming trend experienced in recent years by several countries, could affect agricultural productivity. As a consequence the income of rural populations will change, and with it the incentives for people to remain in rural areas. Using data from 115 countries between 1960 and 2000, we analyze the effect of differential warming trends across countries on the probability of either migrating out of the country or from rural to urban areas. We find that higher temperatures in middle-income economies increased migration rates to urban areas and to other countries. In poor countries, higher temperatures reduced the probability of migration to cities and to other countries, consistently with the presence of severe liquidity constraints. In middle-income countries, migration represents an important margin of adjustment to global warming, potentially contributing to structural change and even increasing income per worker. Such a mechanism, however, does not seem to work in poor economies.
Publication
Journal of Development Economics
Volume
122
Pages
127-146
Date
2016-09-01
ISSN
0304-3878
Call Number
openalex: W2131753378
Extra
openalex: W2131753378 mag: 2131753378
Citation
Cattaneo, C., & Peri, G. (2016). The migration response to increasing temperatures. Journal of Development Economics, 122, 127–146. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2016.05.004
Theme