Sonia Plaza
Senior Economist, Migration and Remittances Team, Development Prospects Group, World Bank
Sonia Plaza is a Senior Economist in the Development Economics Prospects Group of the World Bank. She has worked on science and technology projects in Latin American and coauthored a major analytical survey of migration and development for the Africa region. Sonia was born in Lima, Peru. Her father had a constructing firm, so some of her earliest childhood memories are of traveling with him to poor areas including Ayacucho where he was working on projects. This is how she was first exposed to development work, and it shaped her. She wrote chapter 5 of the book, “Africa’s Silk Road: China and India’s New Economic Frontier”, which covers trade facilitation, technology, and skills transfer, and regional trade agreements. She advises many universities on the transfer of skills and tapping into their diasporas. Sonia attended the University of Lima and earned a degree in Economics, after which she joined Chase Manhattan Bank, and was then invited to join the Peruvian Ministry of Trade as a manager responsible for counter trade and debt swap agreements. She also has a dual degree from Yale University and the University of Pennsylvania in International Economics and Development. She was Professor of Economics (International Economics) at the Peruvian School of Foreign Service and at the University of Lima in Peru, and was adjunct faculty (Microeconomics and Macroeconomics) at The American University in Washington, DC. Her research interests include international migration, labor mobility, trade, and the future of labor. She joined the Institute for the Study of Labor as a Research Fellow in February 2010.
Latest Posts:
- Migration and Remittances News Roundup - Jan 25, 2011
- Migration and Remittances News Roundup - Jan 18, 2011
- Ethiopia’s new diaspora bond: will it be successful this time?
- Are fewer Mexicans crossing the border to the United States?
- Is it possible to send remittances to North Korea?
- New data posted – household surveys for Burkina Faso, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, and Uganda
- Can the Diaspora contribute to the creation of jobs in the Middle East and North Africa?
- Are migration motives and remittances behavior different for women?
- Will their parents’ DREAM come true?
- Will the economic recovery increase demand for immigrants in the labor market?


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