Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference14 articles.
1. Aggarwal, R., & Horowitz, A. W. (2002). Are international remittances altruism or insurance? Evidence from Guyana using multiple-migrant households. World Development, 30(11), 2033–2044.
2. Amuedo-Dorantes, C., et Pozo, S. (2006a). Remittances as insurance: Evidence from Mexican immigrants. Journal of Political Economics, 19(4), 227–254.
3. Amuedo-Dorantes, C., et Pozo, S. (2006b). Migration, remittances and male and female employment patterns. American Economic Review, 26(2), 222–226.
4. Bollard, A., McKenzie, D., Morton, M., et Rapoport, H. (2011). Remittances and the brain drain revisited: The microdata show that more educated migrants remit more. World Bank Economic Review, 25(1), 132–156.
5. Docquier, F., et Marfouk, A. (2006). International migration by education attainment, 1990–2000. In C. Özden, et M. Schiff (Eds.), International migration, remittances and the brain drain. Trade and development (pp. 151–200). World Bank/Palgrave Macmillan.