What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States

Abstract This paper examines the optimal migration duration of Mexican immigrants in the USA using individual-level data from the Mexican Migration Project (MMP). A simple theoretical model rationalizes the decision of the migrant to return to Mexico, despite higher wages in the USA. I use the Cox p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carmen E. Carrión-Flores
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-02-01
Series:IZA Journal of Development and Migration
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-017-0108-0
id doaj-cede23bfa5ed464c809e1a2b845ca4ae
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cede23bfa5ed464c809e1a2b845ca4ae2021-05-02T03:19:41ZengSciendoIZA Journal of Development and Migration2520-17862018-02-018112410.1186/s40176-017-0108-0What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United StatesCarmen E. Carrión-Flores0Department of Economics, Syracuse University Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public AffairsAbstract This paper examines the optimal migration duration of Mexican immigrants in the USA using individual-level data from the Mexican Migration Project (MMP). A simple theoretical model rationalizes the decision of the migrant to return to Mexico, despite higher wages in the USA. I use the Cox proportional hazard model to empirically examine the determinants of return migration of Mexican immigrants. This paper contributes to the literature by introducing distances from origin states in Mexico to destination states in the USA as a proxy for costs of migration and uses a US expected wage measure instead of the average US real wages. The empirical analysis shows that the optimal migration duration increases as the US expected wage increases. Importantly, tighter US migration policies have an ambiguous effect on the optimal migration duration while longer distances decrease the hazard of return to their state of origin.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-017-0108-0
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carmen E. Carrión-Flores
spellingShingle Carmen E. Carrión-Flores
What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States
IZA Journal of Development and Migration
author_facet Carmen E. Carrión-Flores
author_sort Carmen E. Carrión-Flores
title What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States
title_short What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States
title_full What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States
title_fullStr What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States
title_full_unstemmed What makes you go back home? Determinants of the duration of migration of Mexican immigrants in the United States
title_sort what makes you go back home? determinants of the duration of migration of mexican immigrants in the united states
publisher Sciendo
series IZA Journal of Development and Migration
issn 2520-1786
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstract This paper examines the optimal migration duration of Mexican immigrants in the USA using individual-level data from the Mexican Migration Project (MMP). A simple theoretical model rationalizes the decision of the migrant to return to Mexico, despite higher wages in the USA. I use the Cox proportional hazard model to empirically examine the determinants of return migration of Mexican immigrants. This paper contributes to the literature by introducing distances from origin states in Mexico to destination states in the USA as a proxy for costs of migration and uses a US expected wage measure instead of the average US real wages. The empirical analysis shows that the optimal migration duration increases as the US expected wage increases. Importantly, tighter US migration policies have an ambiguous effect on the optimal migration duration while longer distances decrease the hazard of return to their state of origin.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-017-0108-0
work_keys_str_mv AT carmenecarrionflores whatmakesyougobackhomedeterminantsofthedurationofmigrationofmexicanimmigrantsintheunitedstates
_version_ 1721495781943279616