Résumé
This paper focuses on the relationships between remittances and the share of individuals working for less than 2$ US per day. It is based on an original panel dataset containing information related to remittances in about 80 developing countries and to the number of workers being paid less than 2 dollars per day as well. Even after factoring in the endogeneity of remittance inflows the results suggest that remittances lead to a decrease in the prevalence of working poor in receiving economies. This effect is stronger in a context of high macroeconomic volatility but is mitigated by the unpredictability of remittances: remittances are more effective to decreasing the share of working poor when they are easily predictable. Moreover, domestic finance and remittances appear as substitutes: remittances are less efficient in reducing the prevalence of working poor whenever finance is available.
Domaines
Economies et financesOrigine | Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s) |
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https://shs.hal.science/halshs-00585004
Soumis le : lundi 11 avril 2011-15:11:05
Dernière modification le : jeudi 19 décembre 2024-16:32:02
Archivage à long terme le : mardi 12 juillet 2011-02:50:32
Dates et versions
- HAL Id : halshs-00585004 , version 1
Citer
Jean-Louis Combes, Christian Hubert Ebeke, Mathilde Maurel, Urbain Thierry Yogo. Remittances and the Prevalence of Working Poor. 2011. ⟨halshs-00585004⟩
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