Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the relationship between remittances and poverty through the human capital channel in developing countries, which has received less attention in the literature. Design/methodology/approach: The paper applied the system GMM developed by Arellano and Bo...

Olles dieđut

Bibliográfalaš dieđut
Váldodahkkit: Chong, Siew Huay, Mhd Bani, Nor Yasmin
Materiálatiipa: Artihkal
Giella:English
Almmustuhtton: Emerald 2018
Liŋkkat:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/73766/1/Remittances%2C%20poverty%20and%20human%20capital%20evidence%20from%20developing%20countries.pdf
_version_ 1825950245787271168
author Chong, Siew Huay
Mhd Bani, Nor Yasmin
author_facet Chong, Siew Huay
Mhd Bani, Nor Yasmin
author_sort Chong, Siew Huay
collection UPM
description Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the relationship between remittances and poverty through the human capital channel in developing countries, which has received less attention in the literature. Design/methodology/approach: The paper applied the system GMM developed by Arellano and Bond (1991) and Arellano and Bover (1995) containing 54 developing countries. This estimator is appropriate compared to a cross-section technique because it controls for the endogeneity of all explanatory variables, includes unobserved country-specific effects and allows for the inclusion of lagged dependent variables. Findings: The results suggest that, while remittances reduced poverty, the effect is moderated via education. A 1 percent increase in remittances reduces the poverty headcount by 0.47 percent, while the reduction is 0.33 percent via education. The marginal effect of remittances is negatively related to the level of education, indicating that education mitigates the effect of remittances on poverty. Practical implications: This paper includes the implications for the policymakers to justify the need for more effective approaches. It is useful to identify whether and how remittances and human capital interact in their effect on poverty when deciding the most desirable allocation of available resources between these two priorities. Originality/value This paper takes a step forward filling the limited evidence on the role of human capital in remittances–poverty relationship in developing countries. Different from the existing studies which have used the traditional panel estimators, this study utilizes the dynamic panel estimators such as system GMM to tackle the specification issues of endogeneity, measurement errors and heterogeneity.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T10:11:40Z
format Article
id upm.eprints-73766
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T10:11:40Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Emerald
record_format dspace
spelling upm.eprints-737662020-05-26T20:02:40Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/73766/ Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries Chong, Siew Huay Mhd Bani, Nor Yasmin Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the relationship between remittances and poverty through the human capital channel in developing countries, which has received less attention in the literature. Design/methodology/approach: The paper applied the system GMM developed by Arellano and Bond (1991) and Arellano and Bover (1995) containing 54 developing countries. This estimator is appropriate compared to a cross-section technique because it controls for the endogeneity of all explanatory variables, includes unobserved country-specific effects and allows for the inclusion of lagged dependent variables. Findings: The results suggest that, while remittances reduced poverty, the effect is moderated via education. A 1 percent increase in remittances reduces the poverty headcount by 0.47 percent, while the reduction is 0.33 percent via education. The marginal effect of remittances is negatively related to the level of education, indicating that education mitigates the effect of remittances on poverty. Practical implications: This paper includes the implications for the policymakers to justify the need for more effective approaches. It is useful to identify whether and how remittances and human capital interact in their effect on poverty when deciding the most desirable allocation of available resources between these two priorities. Originality/value This paper takes a step forward filling the limited evidence on the role of human capital in remittances–poverty relationship in developing countries. Different from the existing studies which have used the traditional panel estimators, this study utilizes the dynamic panel estimators such as system GMM to tackle the specification issues of endogeneity, measurement errors and heterogeneity. Emerald 2018 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/73766/1/Remittances%2C%20poverty%20and%20human%20capital%20evidence%20from%20developing%20countries.pdf Chong, Siew Huay and Mhd Bani, Nor Yasmin (2018) Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries. International Journal of Social Economics, 45 (8). 1277 - 1235. ISSN 0306-8293 10.1353/jda.2017.0010
spellingShingle Chong, Siew Huay
Mhd Bani, Nor Yasmin
Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries
title Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries
title_full Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries
title_fullStr Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries
title_short Remittances, poverty and human capital: evidence from developing countries
title_sort remittances poverty and human capital evidence from developing countries
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/73766/1/Remittances%2C%20poverty%20and%20human%20capital%20evidence%20from%20developing%20countries.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT chongsiewhuay remittancespovertyandhumancapitalevidencefromdevelopingcountries
AT mhdbaninoryasmin remittancespovertyandhumancapitalevidencefromdevelopingcountries