Remittances, Human Capital, and Economic Growth: Panel Data Evidence from Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa
Chakra Acharya and
Roberto Leon-Gonzalez
No 18-01, GRIPS Discussion Papers from National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies
Abstract:
We examine the impact of remittances on economic growth using panel data (1975-2014) for 18 countries in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) that are similar in size and development level. We allow for heterogeneous production functions across countries and calculate the average marginal effects of remittances using the panel dynamic ordinary least squares estimator. The estimation results show that remittances increase growth significantly, especially through investments in human capital. In addition we find that: (i) remittances have a modest impact on growth when controlling for physical and human capital channels through which remittances potentially affect output growth; (ii) when we do not control for human capital the effect is larger regardless of the sub-samples considered - the elasticity of output with respect to remittances is 7.3 percent in the full sample, and 18.6 percent among Asian countries ; (iii) remittances have a significant positive long-run effect on human capital formation regardless of the sub-samples considered but the effect on physical capital accumulation is significant only among middle income and Asian countries. The findings suggest that channeling the remittances towards investments in physical capital and adoption of new knowledge, skills and technology is crucial for high economic growth in low income countries.
Pages: 22 pages
Date: 2018-05
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dev, nep-gro, nep-knm and nep-sea
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ngi:dpaper:18-01
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