Migrant Remittances and Exchange Rate Regimes in the Developing World

Author:

SINGER DAVID ANDREW

Abstract

This article argues that the international financial consequences of immigration exert a substantial influence on the choice of exchange rate regimes in the developing world. Over the past two decades, migrant remittances have emerged as a significant source of external finance for developing countries, often exceeding conventional sources of capital such as foreign direct investment and bank lending. Remittances are unlike nearly all other capital flows in that they are stable and move countercyclically relative to the recipient country's economy. As a result, they mitigate the costs of forgone domestic monetary policy autonomy and also serve as an international risk-sharing mechanism for developing countries. The observable implication of these arguments is that remittances increase the likelihood that policy makers adopt fixed exchange rates. An analysis of data onde factoexchange rate regimes and a newly available data set on remittances for up to 74 developing countries from 1982 to 2006 provides strong support for these arguments. The results are robust to instrumental variable analysis and the inclusion of multiple economic and political variables.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference121 articles.

1. Bodea Cristina . n.d. “Exchange Rate Regimes and Independent Central Banks: A Correlated Choice of Imperfectly Credible Institutions.” International Organization. Forthcoming.

2. Roache Shaun K. , and Gradzka Ewa . 2007. “Do Remittances to Latin America Depend on the U.S. Business Cycle?” Working Paper No. 273. IMF.

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