Working Paper: Migrant Networks and Trade

10 May 2014

Christopher Parsons and Pierre-Louis Vézina

Authors: Christopher Parsons, International Migration Institute, University of Oxford (christopher.parsons@qeh.ox.ac.uk); Pierre-Louis Vézina, Department of Economics, University of Oxford (pierre-louis.vezina@economics.ox.ac.uk)

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The authors provide cogent evidence for the causal pro-trade effect of migrants and in doing so establish an important link between migrant networks and long-run economic development. To this end, we exploit a unique event in human history, the exodus of the Vietnamese Boat People to the US. This episode represents an ideal natural experiment as the large immigration shock, the first wave of which comprised refugees exogenously allocated across the US, occurred over a twenty-year period during which time the US imposed a complete trade embargo on Vietnam. Following the lifting of trade restrictions in 1994, the share of US exports going to Vietnam was higher and more diversified in those US States with larger Vietnamese populations, themselves the result of larger refugee inflows 20 years earlier.