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The EU’s migration and development policy: New approaches in economics for more effective public aid

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Intereconomics

Abstract

Among the EU member states, increasing immigration has led to a recent debate over changes to European refugee and migration policies. The desire among the poor to escape from a hopeless economic and social situation in their home countries is the most common impetus for their migration. As the EU is the world’s biggest donor of public development aid, new approaches in European development politics are much needed to increase the effectiveness of this aid and to create a sustainable improvement of the economic situation among the poor. This article focuses on a new approach to implement more efficient and cost-effective development strategies that include individual time preference as well as insights from behavioural and experimental economics.

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Correspondence to Susanne Müller-Using.

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In order to combine the research fields of tropical medicine, development economics and health economics, the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWI) and the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine have established an interdisciplinary research community.

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Müller-Using, S., Vöpel, H. The EU’s migration and development policy: New approaches in economics for more effective public aid. Intereconomics 49, 95–101 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10272-014-0491-1

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10272-014-0491-1

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