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  • 10.11.17cid_headshots597_preview_0.jpeg

    Person

    Ljubica Nedelkoska

    Senior Research Fellow, Growth Lab

  • Working Papers

    Nedelkoska, L., et al., 2025

    De Facto Openness to Immigration

    Various factors influence why some countries are more open to immigration than others. Policy is only one of them. We design country-specifc measures of openness to immigration that aim to […]
    Growth Lab

    Various factors influence why some countries are more open to immigration than others. Policy is only one of them. We design country-specifc measures of openness to immigration that aim to capture de facto levels of openness to immigration, complementing existing de jure measures of immigration, based on enacted immigration laws and policy measures. We estimate these for 148 countries and three years (2000, 2010, and 2020). For a subset of countries, we also distinguish between openness towards tertiary-educated migrants and less than tertiary-educated migrants. Using the measures, we show that most places in the World today are closed to immigration, and a few regions are very open. The World became more open in the first decade of the millennium, an opening mainly driven by the Western World and the Gulf countries. Moreover, we show that other factors equal, countries that increased their openness to immigration, reduced their old-age dependency ratios, and experienced slower real wage growth, arguably a sign of relaxing labor and skill shortages.

    Explore the country rankings in our interactive visualization website and learn more about the project, Leveraging the Global Talent Pool to Jumpstart Prosperity in Emerging Economies.

  • Margarita Isaacs

    Person

    Margarita Isaacs

    Student Research Assistant

  • Migration

    Project

    Academic Research

    Leveraging the Global Talent Pool to Jumpstart Prosperity in Emerging Economies

    In this project, researchers measure countries’ degree of openness towards different groups of migrants, and test the hypothesis that more developed economies are more open to international migrants, and in particular to international talent.
  • Diego Martin

    Person

    Diego Martin

    Researcher

  • Lucila Venturi

    Person

    Lucila Venturi

    Research Fellow

  • alexia-lochmann

    Person

    Alexia Lochmann

    Research Fellow

  • sarah-bui

    Person

    Sarah Bui

    Former Research Assistant

  • 10.11.17cid_headshots597_preview_0.jpeg

    Person

    Ljubica Nedelkoska

    Senior Research Fellow

  • Ricardo Hausmann

    Person

    Ricardo Hausmann

    Director