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Massimiliano Calì is a development economist, and his current research focuses on the relation between trade, development and growth, on the effects of migration on source countries, and on the determinants and implications of urbanisation in developing countries.
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Authors: Massimiliano Cali and Nicola Cantore
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Quantifications of the overall effects of Circular migration schemes on home countries are scant. This research paper draws upon a global integrated assessment model in order to provide some quantification of the possible effects of different types of circular migration patterns and compares them with traditional permanent migration. In the simulations for four countries (Sierra Leone, Ghana, Vietnam and Moldova), research results suggest circular migration programmes yield better outcomes than permanent migration due to the productivity gains induced in the home countries by returning migrants.
- 56 pages
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Published by
Studie für den Sachverständigenrat deutscher Stiftungen für Integration und Migration
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Authors: Massimiliano Calì, Siddhartha Mitra, Purnima Purohit
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Effective relations between states and business have been increasingly identified as an important institution for sustaining economic development. This paper constructs quantitative indices measuring the quality of state–business relations (SBRs) across Indian states in the 1985–2008 period.
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Published by
Development Studies Association and Wiley-Blackwell
as part of the
Journal of International Development
series.
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Full summary
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Authors: Massimilliano Cali
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This paper examines the impact of effective state–business relations on economic growth across Indian states over the period 1985–2006. This paper proposes a measure that captures the various dimensions of effective state–business relations at the sub-national level, and estimate standard growth regressions using dynamic panel data methods. Results show that effective state–business relations contribute significantly to economic growth and appear to be driven by the intensity of the interactions between the state and the private sector.
- 15 pages
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Published by
Elsevier
as part of the
World Development
series.
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Authors: Massimilliano Cali and Dirk Willem te Velde
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Utilising data on a large subset of developing countries, this research examines the extent to which various types of aid for trade have helped recipient countries’ trade performance and finds that aid for trade facilitation reduces the costs of trading.
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Published by
Elsevier
as part of the
World Development
series.
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