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REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

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Peri specifications in log-log space and the Cheng and Wall approach:<br />

(3)<br />

SOME ASPECTS OF TRADE STATISTICS <strong>AND</strong> REPORTING<br />

Equation (3) specifies the gravity model where STOCK ij,t<br />

is the stock of the origin country<br />

population in each of the destination countries expressed as a percentage of the total<br />

population in the host country, GDPpc jt-1<br />

is the GDP per capita of the sending (or origin)<br />

country, GDPpc it-1<br />

is the GDP per capita of the destination (or host) country, POP jt-1<br />

is the<br />

population of the country of origin, POP it-1<br />

is the population of the host country, GINI jt-1<br />

denotes the Gini coefficient of the country of origin, GINI it-1<br />

is the Gini coefficient of the<br />

host country, DIST ij,t<br />

is a proxy variable for distance between country of origin and the host<br />

country, CONTIG ij,t<br />

and COMLANG ij,t<br />

are the dummy variables taking the value of 1 if<br />

the sending country and destination country are contingent and have the same language.<br />

Finally, the terms α are the country-pair individual effects covering all unobservable<br />

i j<br />

factors related to the country-pair migrations costs, λ<br />

t<br />

are time specific effects and ε<br />

is the error term.<br />

The main hypothesis of this paper is that the stock of the migrant population in the<br />

destination country is determined by the income per person differentials between the<br />

sending and host countries. Thus the stock of migration should decrease with the origin<br />

country GDP per capita ( β 1<br />

< 0)<br />

and increase with the host country’s GDP per capita<br />

( β > 0) 2<br />

. According to the Ortega and Peri (2009) specifications, the GDP per capita<br />

of the destination country, which is measured as PPP gross domestic product per person,<br />

explicitly captures the effect of the difference in incomes between the destination and origin<br />

countries. In particular, the assumption is that average expected labour income in the host<br />

country is adequately measured by GDP per capita of the destination country.<br />

If we suppose that costs of migrants increase with distance, a negative sign for β<br />

7<br />

is<br />

expected. Distance fundamentally determines migration. For instance, Central and Eastern<br />

European countries, which are geographically closer to the observed EU-15 member<br />

states, may have a distance advantage in comparison with the developing North African<br />

countries. Migration is also higher between a pair of countries sharing a border and a<br />

common language. For this reason a positive sign is expected for the term β<br />

8<br />

and β<br />

9<br />

.<br />

As the gravity model in its basic form assumes that the stock of the migrant populations<br />

will increase with the size differentials, 7 a positive sign is expected for this variable as a<br />

measure of size differentials between the sending and receiving countries in the present<br />

analysis.<br />

The supposition is that a country with an increasing population may find it easier to absorb<br />

new immigrants with little consequence for its own population. According to this supposition<br />

, ti j<br />

7 Linnermann (1996) included population as an additional measure of country size, where a positive sign is to<br />

be expected.<br />

207

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