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Syrian refugees and the migration dynamics of Jordanians: moving in or moving out?

Syrian refugees and the migration dynamics of Jordanians: moving in or moving out?
Syrian refugees and the migration dynamics of Jordanians: moving in or moving out?
This paper examines the impact of massive refugee inflows on the internal mobility of the host’s country population. We rely on panel data from before and after the Syrian war and exploit the geographical distribution of Syrians across Jordanian sub-districts. Using Difference-in-Differences, we find that the Syrian inflows increased Jordanian residential mobility. In particular, native outflows of the camp hosting areas increased by 27%. The increased residential mobility out of the camp areas seems to be triggered by an increase in rents and a crowding out of Jordanian students by Syrians in schools. Our results also show that the Syrian presence increased Jordanians’ job location mobility into the camp areas. These findings are robust to controlling for refugees’ locational sorting using instrumental variables, while auxiliary placebo regressions confirm that pre-existing trends in outcomes are not driving the results. We also provide a thorough discussion on the impact of refugees versus broader impacts of the Syrian war.
Elmallakh, Nelly
f8651a26-caf9-4135-aae2-0f7e8bf8b0fd
Wahba, Jackline
03ae9304-c329-40c6-9bfc-d91cfa9e7164
Elmallakh, Nelly
f8651a26-caf9-4135-aae2-0f7e8bf8b0fd
Wahba, Jackline
03ae9304-c329-40c6-9bfc-d91cfa9e7164

Elmallakh, Nelly and Wahba, Jackline (2021) Syrian refugees and the migration dynamics of Jordanians: moving in or moving out? Economic Development and Cultural Change. (doi:10.1086/717281).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper examines the impact of massive refugee inflows on the internal mobility of the host’s country population. We rely on panel data from before and after the Syrian war and exploit the geographical distribution of Syrians across Jordanian sub-districts. Using Difference-in-Differences, we find that the Syrian inflows increased Jordanian residential mobility. In particular, native outflows of the camp hosting areas increased by 27%. The increased residential mobility out of the camp areas seems to be triggered by an increase in rents and a crowding out of Jordanian students by Syrians in schools. Our results also show that the Syrian presence increased Jordanians’ job location mobility into the camp areas. These findings are robust to controlling for refugees’ locational sorting using instrumental variables, while auxiliary placebo regressions confirm that pre-existing trends in outcomes are not driving the results. We also provide a thorough discussion on the impact of refugees versus broader impacts of the Syrian war.

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Syrian refugees and the migration dynamics of Jordanians - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 July 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 September 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 451337
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451337
PURE UUID: be73da13-825c-432b-bebe-abeea79bd354
ORCID for Jackline Wahba: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0002-3443

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Date deposited: 21 Sep 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:49

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Contributors

Author: Nelly Elmallakh
Author: Jackline Wahba ORCID iD

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