Remittances, school quality, and household education expenditures in Nepal

Author:

Bansak Cynthia,Chezum Brian,Giri Animesh

Abstract

Abstract A heightened interest in understanding the remitting practices of immigrants and their impact on a variety of economic indicators has emerged as remittances to developing countries have risen substantially over the past decade. If remittances primarily enhance consumption, they may have no lasting impact on economic growth. However, through asset accumulation and human capital investment, remittances may serve as a vehicle for growth. In this paper, we use the 2010 Nepal Living Standards Survey III (NLSS III) to examine how remittances affect household expenditures on human capital investment. Overall, our findings suggest that at the margin, remittances do contribute to human capital investment, but this effect varies substantially by school quality within Nepal. In addition, our results indicate that internal remittances (remittances from household members migrating internally) have a greater impact on education than do external remittances. We posit that this may be due to a higher value placed on Nepali education by internal migrants as compared to the education needed for foreign job opportunities by migrants abroad. JEL codes: J61, I25, F22, F24, H52, O15

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Demography

Reference19 articles.

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2. Acosta PA, Fajnzylber PR, Lopez H (2007) The Impact of Remittances on Poverty and Human Capital: Evidence from Latin American Household Surveys. In: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4247

3. Adams RH Jr, Cuecuecha A, Page J (2008) Remittances, Consumption and Investment in Ghana. In: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4515

4. Amuedo-Dorantes C, Bansak C, Pozo S (2005) On the Remitting Patterns of Immigrants: Evidence from Mexican Survey Data. Economic Review-Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta 90(1):31–58

5. Antman FM (2012) Gender, educational attainment, and the impact of parental migration on children left behind. J Popul Econ 25(4):1187–1214. doi:10.1007/s00148-012-0423-y

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