Paper
The Economics of Migrants' Remittances
An exploration of the effects of remittances on inequalities within a community
82 pages
This paper reviews recent theoretical and empirical economic literature on migrants' remittances. It contains a micro-economic section on the determinants of remittances and a macro-economic section on their growth effects.
At the micro-level, the paper finds that:
- Models based on different motives to remit share many common predictions;
- It is difficult to implement truly discriminative tests in the absence of detailed data on the migrants' and receiving households' characteristics and on the timing of remittances;
- A mixture of individualistic and familial motives explain the likelihood and size of remittances;
- There is some evidence of moral hazard on the recipient's side and of the use of inheritance prospects to monitor the migrants' behaviour ;
- The incentive structure leads to patterns of migration and remittances that can raise inter-household inequality at origin.
At the macro-level, the paper:
- Reviews the standard (Keynesian) and the trade-theoretic literature on the short-run impact of remittances;
- Uses an endogenous growth framework to describe the growth potential of remittances and presents evidence for different growth channels;
- Finds evidence that remittances:
- Promote access to self-employment and raise investment in small-businesses;
- Raise educational attainments within households having migrant members;
- Have a non-monotonic relationship with inequality, that is, remittances seem to decrease economic inequality in communities with a long migration tradition;
- Increase inequalities within communities at the beginning of the migration process.
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