Migration and Regime Change: Outflows Follow Democratic Decline, Inflows Fuel Illiberal Drift

25 Pages Posted: 13 May 2025 Last revised: 26 May 2025

See all articles by Assaf Razin

Assaf Razin

Tel Aviv University - Eitan Berglas School of Economics

Date Written: May 2025

Abstract

This paper explores the two-way relationship between international migration and political regime change, emphasizing the potential for a feedback loop: political shifts influence migration patterns, and migration can, in turn, affect political developments. Using a Difference-in-Differences (DiD) approach and a dataset combining migration flows, regime quality indicators (CHRI), and measures of economic integration such as EU membership, the study identifies three key findings. First, substantial immigration into politically fragile democracies can further weaken their institutions. Second, democratic decline tends to increase emigration, undermining a country's ability to a democratic institutional recovery. Third, international economic integration, particularly in our study, through EU accession—shapes how emigration responds to political change.

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Suggested Citation

Razin, Assaf, Migration and Regime Change: Outflows Follow Democratic Decline, Inflows Fuel Illiberal Drift (May 2025). NBER Working Paper No. w33793, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5250759

Assaf Razin (Contact Author)

Tel Aviv University - Eitan Berglas School of Economics ( email )

P.O. Box 39040
Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, 69978
Israel

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