Migration and happiness
According to this paper by Stillman et.al. international
migration brings improvements in personal and household incomes to the migrant but
paradoxically has a negative impact on their happiness. Clearly, any analysis
of this kind has a potential selection bias. That is, we shouldn't assume that
the ones who migrate are exactly the same in cognitive and psychological skill as
those who remain in the original country. The paper goes around this issue by
using a natural experiment. The paper
compared successful and unsuccessful applicants to a migration lottery held by
New Zealand. By doing so, the selection bias is ruled out. Bear in mind that
the comparison, then, is between those who wanted to migrate but were
unsuccessful and those who were successful. So, there’s no comparison with
those who don’t really want to migrate.
The literature seems to support this result. Migrants gain
in material well-being but happiness and other components of subjective well-being
may be reduced. Even more contradictory is that despite a grow in unhappiness ,
mental health improves. The most accepted theory to explain this fact is the ‘adaptation
theory’. The changes in references makes subjectivity variables change in
different ways.
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