IMF Working Papers

Agricultural Distortions and International Migration

ByBraulio Britos, Manuel A. Hernandez, Danilo Trupkin

November 7, 2025

Preview Citation

Format: Chicago

Braulio Britos, Manuel A. Hernandez, and Danilo Trupkin. "Agricultural Distortions and International Migration", IMF Working Papers 2025, 233 (2025), accessed 12/5/2025, https://doi.org/10.5089/9798229026314.001

Export Citation

  • ProCite
  • RefWorks
  • Reference Manager
  • BibTex
  • Zotero
  • EndNote

Disclaimer: IMF Working Papers describe research in progress by the author(s) and are published to elicit comments and to encourage debate. The views expressed in IMF Working Papers are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the IMF, its Executive Board, or IMF management.

Summary

International migration is a recurrent phenomenon that has grown rapidly over the past two decades. This paper examines the role of agricultural distortions in shaping emigration patterns and influencing productivity and welfare in developing countries, using Guatemala as a case study. We develop a theoretical framework where household members can work in agriculture, non-agriculture, or emigrate, and calibrate the model combining detailed micro and aggregate data. Our model identifies two key channels through which agricultural distortions affect migration and productivity: a first channel where distortions increase emigration among more productive agents, reducing aggregate productivity, and a second channel where distortions drive factor misallocation, lowering incomes and increasing overall emigration. Simulations suggest that, reducing distortions in the agricultural sector to the most efficient department in each region would lower the emigrant share by 2.3 percentage points, primarily among more productive workers. Lower distortions would similarly boost aggregate agricultural productivity by 30.1% and raise welfare by 3.4%. An analysis at the sub-national level reveals that high-distortion areas are more isolated and exhibit less financial penetration and government presence.

Subject: Agricultural sector, Economic sectors, Migration, Population and demographics, Production, Productivity, Total factor productivity

Keywords: aggregate productivity, Agricultural distortions, Agricultural sector, Caribbean, Central America, Emigration, emigration pattern, IMF working papers, Labor mobility, Migration, migration share, Productivity, productivity channel, South America, Total factor productivity, Welfare