Abstract
In the Third World remittances - defmed as money and goods
that are transmitted by migrant workers to their households back home -
can have a profound impact upon rural income distribution. This is true
for both internal remittances, which are often small but widespread
among the rural population, as well as for international remittances,
which are typically larger and more concentrated. Despite these
considerations, there is still no general consensus about the effect of
internal or international remittances on rural income distribution in
the Third World. On the one hand, Lipton (1980) argues that in India
internal remittances worsen rural inequality because they are earned
mainly by upper-income villagers. With respect to international
remittances, Gilani, Khan and Iqbal (1981) in Pakistan and Adams in
Egypt (1991, 1989) produce similar fmdings. On the other hand, some
empirical studies suggest a very different outcome. For example, Stark,
Taylor and Yitzhaki (1986) fmd that internal and international
remittances in Mexico have an egalitarian effect on rural income
distribution.1 Two major reasons appear to account for such lack of
consensus on the effect of remittances upon rural income distribution:
the use of local-level data collection techniques that preclude making
unambiguous empirical judgements about the effects of remittances; and
the reluctance or inability to use predicted income functions to
accurately estimate income before and after remittances.
Publisher
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
14 articles.
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