IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

The New Economics of Skilled Labor Migration: The Case of Medical Doctors in MENA

The New Economics of Skilled Labor Migration: The Case of Medical Doctors in MENA
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Molk Kadiri (Al Akhawayn University, Morocco)and Nada Zouag (Al Akhawayn University, Morocco)
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 26
Source title: Labor and Health Economics in the Mediterranean Region: Migration and Mobility of Medical Doctors
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Ahmed Driouchi (Al Akhawayn University, Morocco)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-4723-7.ch011

Purchase

View The New Economics of Skilled Labor Migration: The Case of Medical Doctors in MENA on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

This is a contribution to the new economics of skilled labor emigration that focuses on the mobility of medical doctors from Middle East and North African countries. The theoretical model under risk neutrality and aversion as suggested in chapter 9 is applied. The findings show that the relative expected benefits and the emigration rate have major effects on the net relative human medical capital that remains in the source country. The effects of relative wages in the destination and sending countries besides the yield of education are likely to change the emigration patterns. Comparisons of theoretical and observed relative human capital per country averages are conducted and the statistical validity of the model is ensured. The empirical results based on the available data by Docquier and Marfouk (2006) and Bhargava, Docquier, and Moullan (2010) allow further use of the model to understand the current trends in the emigration of medical doctors. These trends confirm the magnitude of relative wages besides the level of education and the attitude towards risk as determinants of the emigration of skilled labor. The countries included in the study all exhibited brain gain from 1991-2004, but two distinct groups of countries are identified. Each country is encouraged to anticipate the likely effects of this emigration on the economy with the increase of health demand, domestic wages, and the increase in education capacity for medical doctors.

Related Content

Iris-Panagiota Efthymiou, Symeon Sidiropoulos. © 2024. 24 pages.
Nitish Kumar Minz, Anshul Saluja. © 2024. 29 pages.
Iris-Panagiota Efthymiou. © 2024. 24 pages.
Antoine Toni Trad. © 2024. 43 pages.
Martha Ann Davis McGaw. © 2024. 15 pages.
Agyabeng Nimfah Yeboah, Leila Goosen. © 2024. 24 pages.
Surjit Singha. © 2024. 23 pages.
Body Bottom