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Closed Jaguar, Open Dragon: Comparing Tariffs in Latin America and Asia before World War II
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Year: 2002 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Why Did the Tariff-Growth Correlation Reverse After 1950?
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Year: 2002 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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A Tariff-Growth Paradox? Protection's Impact the World Around 1875-1997
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Year: 2001 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Where did British Foreign Capital Go? Fundamentals, Failures and the Lucas Paradox: 1870-1913
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Year: 2000 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Immigration Restrictions as Active Labor Market Policy : Evidence from the Mexican Bracero Exclusion
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Year: 2017 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Labor Market Effects of Refugee Waves : Reconciling Conflicting Results
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Year: 2017 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Effect of Low-Skill Immigration Restrictions on US Firms and Workers
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Year: 2022 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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The Labor Market Effects of Refugee Waves : Reconciling Conflicting Results
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Year: 2017 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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An influential strand of research has tested for the effects of immigration on natives' wages and employment using exogenous refugee supply shocks as natural experiments. Several studies have reached conflicting conclusions about the effects of noted refugee waves such as the Mariel Boatlift in Miami and post-Soviet refugees to Israel. We show that conflicting findings on the effects of the Mariel Boatlift can be explained by a sudden change in the race composition of the Current Population Survey extracts in 1980, specific to Miami but unrelated to the Boatlift. We also show that conflicting findings on the labor-market effects of other important refugee waves can be produced by spurious correlation between the instrument and the endogenous variable introduced by applying a common divisor to both. As a whole, the evidence from refugee waves reinforces the existing consensus that the impact of immigration on average native-born workers is small, and fails to substantiate claims of large detrimental impacts on workers with less than high school.


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When does rigorous impact evaluation make a difference? : the case of the millennium villages
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Year: 2010 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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When is the rigorous impact evaluation of development projects a luxury, and when a necessity? This Paper studies one high-profile case: the Millennium Villages Project (MVP), an experimental and intensive package intervention to spark sustained local economic development in rural Africa. it illustrates the benefits of rigorous impact evaluation in this setting by showing that estimates of the project's effects depend heavily on the evaluation method. Comparing trends at the MVP intervention sites in Kenya, Ghana, and Nigeria to trends in the surrounding areas yields much more modest estimates of the project's effects than the before-versus-after comparisons published thus far by the MVP. Neither approach constitutes a rigorous impact evaluation of the MVP, which is impossible to perform due to weaknesses in the evaluation design of the project's initial phase. These weaknesses include the subjective choice of intervention sites, the subjective choice of comparison sites, the lack of baseline data on comparison sites, the small sample size, and the short time horizon. The authors describe how the next wave of the intervention could be designed to allow proper evaluation of the MVP's impact at little additional cost.


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Why Don't Remittances Appear to Affect Growth?
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Year: 2014 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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Although measured remittances by migrant workers have soared in recent years, macroeconomic studies have difficulty detecting their effect on economic growth. This paper reviews existing explanations for this puzzle and proposes three new ones. First, it offers evidence that a large majority of the recent rise in measured remittances may be illusory-arising from changes in measurement, not changes in real financial flows. Second, it shows that even if these increases were correctly measured, cross-country regressions would have too little power to detect their effects on growth. Third, it points out that the greatest driver of rising remittances is rising migration, which has an opportunity cost to economic product at the origin. Net of that cost, there is little reason to expect large growth effects of remittances in the origin economy. Migration and remittances clearly have first-order effects on poverty at the origin, on the welfare of migrants and their families, and on global gross domestic product; but detecting their effects on growth of the origin economy is likely to remain elusive.

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