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Climate Variability and worldwide migration by Cristina Cattaneo

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Published 14 Jun 2021

Climate Variability and worldwide migration. Current evidence and future projections Cristina Cattaneo, Shouro Dasgupta, Emanuele Massetti and Fabio Farinosi Intro: 00:10 Michel Beine (University of Luxembourg) Presentation: 01:08 Cristina Cattaneo (European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)) Q&A: 44:10 Moderator Michel Beine (University of Luxembourg) Abstract The literature linking climatic drivers and migration is growing, but there is still limited evidence and substantial uncertainty on multilateral flows on a global scale. This paper fills this gap in research by projecting changes in inflows and outflows of migrants from medium-term population and climate change. We estimate a panel bilateral gravity equation for emigration rates controlling for various indicators of decadal weather averages in the origin countries. We control for temperature, precipitation, droughts, and excess precipitation. The sample covers 100 origin and 166 destination countries for each decade from 1960 to 2010. We project bilateral changes in migration using the parameter estimates of the gravity equation, along with projections of socio-economic variables under shared socioeconomic pathways (SSP) and climate change scenarios from General Circulation Models (GCM) for various representative concentration pathways (RCPs). We find that average decadal emigration flows increase from 80 to nearly 140 million depending on the SSP, RCP and future year. Changes in migration are mainly due to population growth in the origin countries. By constraining the population of the origin countries to remain at current levels, we find that the number of climate international migrants is comparable in size to the emigration flows observed today.

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