Feminist Economics
Volume 18, Issue 2, 2012, Pages 231-263

Understanding human trafficking origin:A cross-country empirical analysis (Article)

Rao S.* , Presenti C.
  • a Department of Economics, Assumption College, 500 Salisbury Street, 313 Founders Hall, Worcester, MA 01609, United States
  • b 14 Marblehead Drive, Nashua, NH 03063, United States

Abstract

Feminist work on global human trafficking has highlighted the conceptual difficulty of differentiating between trafficking and migration. This contribution uses a cross-country United Nations Office on Crime and Drugs dataset on human trafficking from 2006 to empirically evaluate the socioeconomic characteristics of high-trafficking origin countries and compare them with patterns that have emerged in the literature on migration. In particular, the authors ask how and how much per capita income and gender inequality matter in shaping patterns of human trafficking. Ordinal log it regressions corrected for sample selection bias show that trafficking has an inverse U-shaped relationship with income per capita, and, controlling for income per capita, trafficking is more likely in countries with higher shares of female-to-male income. These results suggest strong parallels between patterns of trafficking and migration and lead the authors to believe that trafficking cannot be addressed without addressing the drivers of migration. © 2012 IAFFE.

Author Keywords

Gender Migration Trafficking

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84865050602&doi=10.1080%2f13545701.2012.680978&partnerID=40&md5=fc1e3bb005fd5e5770092293a247c327

DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2012.680978
ISSN: 13545701
Cited by: 30
Original Language: English