Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia

This paper has three objectives. The first objective is to examine the long-run relationships among exports, imports, income and demand for migrant workers. This is followed by a causality test between these variables as the second objective. Finally, the third objective is to examine the extent to...

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Main Authors: Fariastuti, Djafar, Mohd Khairul, Hisyam Hassan
Format: E-Article
Language:English
Published: Asian Economic and Social Society 2013
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/17473/1/DOES%20TRADE%20WITH%20LABOUR%20SENDING%20COUNTRIES%20%28abstract%29.pdf
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spelling my.unimas.ir.174732017-09-06T03:49:50Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/17473/ Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia Fariastuti, Djafar Mohd Khairul, Hisyam Hassan HM Sociology This paper has three objectives. The first objective is to examine the long-run relationships among exports, imports, income and demand for migrant workers. This is followed by a causality test between these variables as the second objective. Finally, the third objective is to examine the extent to which exports, imports and income affect the demand for migrant workers. The study utilizes time series data and a Vector Auto Regressive (VAR) framework while examining two models, namely, Malaysia and Malaysia-Indonesia (Malindo). The findings show that all variables in the models are cointegrated. Generally, there is no short-run causality between variables in the models. In the long-run, causality runs from exports, imports and income to demand for migrant workers for the Malaysia model. There is bi-directional causality in the long-run between exports and imports, respectively, and demand for migrant workers in the Malindo model. Exports and demand for migrant workers in the Malaysia model, and exports and imports, respectively, and demand for migrant workers from Indonesia in the Malindo model are substitutes. Moreover, the income per capita for Malaysia has a non-significant negative effect on the demand for total migrant workers and a significant positive effect on the demand for migrant workers from Indonesia. The study suggests that trade can be a necessary instrument, but not a sufficient instrument for reducing the demand for migrant workers. Asian Economic and Social Society 2013 E-Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/17473/1/DOES%20TRADE%20WITH%20LABOUR%20SENDING%20COUNTRIES%20%28abstract%29.pdf Fariastuti, Djafar and Mohd Khairul, Hisyam Hassan (2013) Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia. Asian Economic and Financial Review, 3 (10). pp. 1325-1336. ISSN 2224-4441 http://aessweb.com/journal-detail.php?id=5002
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic HM Sociology
spellingShingle HM Sociology
Fariastuti, Djafar
Mohd Khairul, Hisyam Hassan
Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia
description This paper has three objectives. The first objective is to examine the long-run relationships among exports, imports, income and demand for migrant workers. This is followed by a causality test between these variables as the second objective. Finally, the third objective is to examine the extent to which exports, imports and income affect the demand for migrant workers. The study utilizes time series data and a Vector Auto Regressive (VAR) framework while examining two models, namely, Malaysia and Malaysia-Indonesia (Malindo). The findings show that all variables in the models are cointegrated. Generally, there is no short-run causality between variables in the models. In the long-run, causality runs from exports, imports and income to demand for migrant workers for the Malaysia model. There is bi-directional causality in the long-run between exports and imports, respectively, and demand for migrant workers in the Malindo model. Exports and demand for migrant workers in the Malaysia model, and exports and imports, respectively, and demand for migrant workers from Indonesia in the Malindo model are substitutes. Moreover, the income per capita for Malaysia has a non-significant negative effect on the demand for total migrant workers and a significant positive effect on the demand for migrant workers from Indonesia. The study suggests that trade can be a necessary instrument, but not a sufficient instrument for reducing the demand for migrant workers.
format E-Article
author Fariastuti, Djafar
Mohd Khairul, Hisyam Hassan
author_facet Fariastuti, Djafar
Mohd Khairul, Hisyam Hassan
author_sort Fariastuti, Djafar
title Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia
title_short Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia
title_full Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia
title_fullStr Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Does Trade With Labour Sending Countries Reduce Demand For Migrant Workers: A Lesson From Malaysia
title_sort does trade with labour sending countries reduce demand for migrant workers: a lesson from malaysia
publisher Asian Economic and Social Society
publishDate 2013
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/17473/1/DOES%20TRADE%20WITH%20LABOUR%20SENDING%20COUNTRIES%20%28abstract%29.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/17473/
http://aessweb.com/journal-detail.php?id=5002
_version_ 1644512628148535296
score 13.18916