The Determinants of Immigration from Fiji to New Zealand: An Empirical Reassessment Using the Bounds Testing Approach

Posted: 10 Jun 2012

See all articles by Paresh Kumar Narayan

Paresh Kumar Narayan

Deakin University - School of Accounting, Economics and Finance

Russell Smyth

Monash University - Department of Economics

Date Written: 2003

Abstract

This article re-examines Gani's (1998) findings on the determinants of migrant flows from Fiji to New Zealand by employing the bounds testing procedure to cointegration, within an autoregressive distributive lag framework. The main findings are that in the long run all variables are statistically insignificant, although correctly signed with the exception of the unemployment differential. In the short run, in sharp contrast to Gani's (1998) findings, political instability is consistently the most important determinant of migration flows while the standard of living and real wage differentials are statistically insignificant across all specifications.

Suggested Citation

Narayan, Paresh Kumar and Smyth, Russell, The Determinants of Immigration from Fiji to New Zealand: An Empirical Reassessment Using the Bounds Testing Approach (2003). International Migration, Vol. 41(5), pp. 33-60, 2003, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2080822

Paresh Kumar Narayan (Contact Author)

Deakin University - School of Accounting, Economics and Finance ( email )

221 Burwood Highway
Burwood, Victoria 3215
Australia

Russell Smyth

Monash University - Department of Economics ( email )

Wellington Road
Clayton, Victoria 3
Australia

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