Global Economic Integration and Nativist Politics in Emerging Economies Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • AbstractNativist political movements are globally ascendant. In advanced democracies, rising antiimmigrant politics is in part a backlash against economic globalization. In emerging economies, where nativists primarily target internal migrants, there is little investigation of whether trade liberalization fuels antimigrant sentiment, perhaps because trade benefits workers in these contexts. I argue that global economic integration causes nativist backlash in emerging economies even though it does not dislocate workers. I highlight an alternative mechanism: geographic labor mobility. Workers strategically migrate to access geographically uneven global economic opportunity. This liberalizationinduced mobility interacts with nativemigrant cleavages to generate nativist backlash. I explore these dynamics in the Indian textile sector, which experienced a positive shock following global trade liberalization in 2005. Using a differenceindifferences analysis, I find that exposed localities experienced increased internal migration and nativism, manifesting in antimigrant rioting and nativist party support. Liberalization can fuel nativism even when its economic impacts arepositive.

published proceedings

  • American Journal of Political Science

altmetric score

  • 17.6

author list (cited authors)

  • Helms, B.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Helms, Benjamin

publisher