移民、祖先与外国投资

Migrants, Ancestors, and Foreign Investments

Review of Economic Studies · 2018
被引 198
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

利用130年美国历史移民数据,发现县区祖先构成对外国直接投资有因果影响,祖先人口翻倍使当地企业与来源国发生FDI的概率提高4个百分点,主要机制是减少信息摩擦。

Abstract

Abstract We use 130 years of data on historical migrations to the U.S. to show a causal effect of the ancestry composition of U.S. counties on foreign direct investment (FDI) sent and received by local firms. To isolate the causal effect of ancestry on FDI, we build a simple reduced-form model of migrations: Migrations from a foreign country to a U.S. county at a given time depend on (1) a push factor, causing emigration from that foreign country to the entire U.S., and (2) a pull factor, causing immigration from all origins into that U.S. county. The interaction between time-series variation in origin-specific push factors and destination-specific pull factors generates quasi-random variation in the allocation of migrants across U.S. counties. We find that doubling the number of residents with ancestry from a given foreign country relative to the mean increases the probability that at least one local firm engages in FDI with that country by 4 percentage points. We present evidence that this effect is primarily driven by a reduction in information frictions, and not by better contract enforcement, taste similarities, or a convergence in factor endowments.

移民祖先外商直接投资信息摩擦