Return migration and health outcomes in North Macedonia

Author:

Petreski Marjan

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is twofold, namely, to investigate if living and working abroad influences the (subjective) health of return migrants and to understand if there are any spillovers of return-migrant members onto health conditions of the family members left behind. Design/methodology/approach To that end, this paper uses the DoTM (Development on the Move) Migration Survey 2009, as well a propensity score matching to address selectivity on observables and IV (instrumental variables) for the selectivity on unobservables. Findings Results suggest that when equalized on observables, return migrants have better health than non-migrants. However, the reverse causality channel (less healthy individuals are more inclined to return) works to attenuate the true effect of return migration on health. Results further suggest a positive spillover effect of return migration on the health of the family members left behind, being mainly driven by the work of remittances sent while abroad, and not by the returned wealth or by the health knowledge transfer. Originality/value This paper offers at least two novelty lines to contribute to the current sparse of knowledge. First, it is among the scarce papers, and probably the only quantitative one, to investigate the nexus between return migration and health outcomes. Second, it heavily dwells on the role of selectivity (both on observables and unobservables) in determining the true (causal) effect of return migration on health.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science,Health (social science)

Reference27 articles.

1. Acosta, P., Fajnzylber, P. and Lopez, J.H. (2007), “The impact of remittances on poverty and human capital: evidence from Latin American household surveys”, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4247, Washington, DC.

2. New evidence on the role of remittances on healthcare expenditures by Mexican households;Review of Economics of the Household,2011

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4. Returning home to die: circular labour migrants and mortality in rural South Africa;Scandinavian Journal of Public Health,2007

5. The dynamics of health and return migration;PloS Medicine,2011

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