Does social media drive remittances in Africa?

Author:

Ongo Nkoa Bruno Emmanuel1ORCID,Song Jacques Simon2,Ondoua Beyene Blaise3ORCID,Ngnouwal Eloundou Georges4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Economics and Management University of Yaounde 2‐Soa, CEREG, ACEDA Soa Cameroon

2. Faculty of Economics and Management University of Ebolowa, ACEDA Ebolowa Cameroon

3. Faculty of Economics and Management University of Dschang, DSEM Dschang Cameroon

4. Faculty of Economics and Management University of Dschang, ACEDA Dschang Cameroon

Abstract

AbstractSocial media in Africa has grown considerably over the past two decades and has fueled an extremely abundant literature. In this article, we examine their effects on remittances observed from a sample of 50 African countries. To achieve this, we specify and estimate a panel data model using the system generalized method of moments over the period 2009–2019. Our results show that social media, approximated by the Facebook penetration rate, increases remittances in Africa. Controlled by four complementary measures of social media (Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, Pinterest, and Twitter), our results remain stable and robust. We suggest a qualitative improvement in connectivity and the establishment of a traceability system to better control the volume and their orientation in the financing of productive economic activities.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Development

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