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Working Paper

The Effect of Foreign Aid on Migration: Global Micro-Evidence from World Bank Projects

Authors

  • Fuchs
  • A.
  • Groeger
  • A.
  • Heidland
  • T.
  • Wellner
  • L.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

F22 F35 F53 H77 O15 O19

Key Words

Foreign Aid

World Bank

Aid Effectiveness

International Migration

Asylum Seeking

Migration Preferences

Gallup World Poll

Related Topics

Migration

International Finance

Globalization

Emerging Markets & Developing Countries

Europe

Asia

Americas

Africa

In response to surging immigration pressure in Europe and the United States, Western policymakers advocate foreign aid as a means to fight the 'root causes' of irregular migration. This article provides the first global evidence of the effects of aid on migration preferences, migration flows, and possible underlying mechanisms, both in the short and longer term. We combine newly geocoded data on World Bank aid project allocation at the subnational level over the period 2008-2019 with exceptionally rich survey data from a sample of almost one million individuals across the entire developing world and data on migration and asylum seeker flows to high-income countries. Employing two distinct causal estimation strategies, we show that in the short term (after the announcement of a World Bank project and within two years after project disbursement), foreign aid improves individual expectations about the future and trust in national institutions in aid-receiving regions, which translate into reduced individual migration preferences and asylum-seeker flows. In the longer term (between three to five years after disbursement), foreign aid fosters improvements in individual welfare through poverty reduction and income increases, resulting in larger regular migration to high-income countries. Our findings show that aid can cause a short-lived reduction in migration aspirations, except in fragile Sub-Saharan African contexts where aid appears largely ineffective. In contrast, foreign aid enhances individual capabilities over the longer term, contributing to greater regular migration, consistent with the 'mobility transition' theory.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Tobias Heidland
    Research Director

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Subject Dossiers

  • Aerial view of an African village, solar-powered well in the center

    Africa

  • View over cargo ship deck with containers

    International Trade

  • Colorful flags of European countires in front of an official EU building.

    Tension within the European Union

Research Center

  • International Development