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Over the last three decades, Europe's generous social benefits have encouraged a massive surge of 'welfare migration,' especially of low skilled laborers. At the same time, the US has attracted many highly skilled migrants, which in turn promotes internal innovation.Restrictions on the international mobility of labor are arguably the largest policy obstructions for the international economy today. A variety of studies suggest that even a small reduction in barriers to migration will result in the growth of significant global welfare benefits. Migration States and Welfare States focuses on a central tension faced by policy makers in countries that receive migrants from lower wage countries. Such countries are typically highly productive and rich in capital. These attributes, coupled with the host country's welfare system, attract low-skilled migrants, who find a generous welfare state particularly attractive, while deterring skilled migrants, who recognize that welfare states likely have higher redistributive taxes.1. Introduction 2. Welfare State 3. Migration State 4. Free versus Controlled Migration: Analytics 5. Free versus Controlled Migration: Migration 6. Principles of International Taxation 7. Intra-Union Competition 8. Intra-Union Coordination 9. Competition versus Coordination: the U.S. and the EU 10. Aging and Migration: the U.S. and the EU 11. Is the Net Fiscal Burden a Proper Predictor of the Political Attitude towards Migration 12. ConclusionAssaf Razin is the Barbara and Steve Friedman Professor of International Economics at Cornell University, USA, and Professor Emeritus of Tel-Aviv University, Israel.
Efraim Sadka is Henry Kaufman Professor of International Capital Markets, Tel-Aviv University, Israel.
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