cover image: Migration, Families, and Counterfactual Families

20.500.12592/1icpobf

Migration, Families, and Counterfactual Families

1 Dec 2023

Migration changes how families form and dissolve, and how we conceptualize the family. This has implications for thinking about how we model the migration decision when individuals are unable to picture the counterfactual families they may have. Differences in marital status can induce two otherwise identical individuals to make different migration decisions. It also has implications for attempts to causally estimate impacts of migration, when the family composition changes with the migration decision itself. We show empirically that changing marital status after migration is widespread, and that the traditional model of a fixed family sending off a migrant who remains part of that same family only describes a minority of migrants moving from developing countries to the U.S. This paper draws out lessons from thinking about counterfactual families for empirical research and for migration policy.

Authors

Simone Bertoli, David McKenzie, Elie Murard

Bibliographic Reference
Simone Bertoli, David McKenzie, Elie Murard. Migration, Families, and Counterfactual Families. 2023. ⟨hal-04328275⟩
HAL Collection
Université de Clermont
HAL Identifier
4328275
Institution
['Institut de Recherche pour le Développement', 'Banque Mondiale', 'University of Trento [Trento]']
Laboratory
["Centre d'Études et de Recherches sur le Développement International", 'Banque Mondiale']
Published in
France

Table of Contents