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Published in: The Review of International Organizations 2/2024

06-10-2023

Migration and development finance: A survey experiment on diaspora bonds

Authors: Lindsay R. Dolan, Alexandra O. Zeitz

Published in: The Review of International Organizations | Issue 2/2024

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Abstract

When will members of a diaspora lend to the government in their country of origin? Diasporans make important contributions to developing countries by sending remittances and investment home. However, little is known about when and why diaspora communities are willing to invest in the governments of their country of origin. Diasporans may invest at home because of their affinity with their country of origin, whether in the form of national pride, stake in economic development, or political support. This paper investigates whether these different affinity-based motivations explain the interest of diaspora members in purchasing home country government bonds. We use a survey experiment fielded to members of the Pakistani diaspora living in the United States to investigate diaspora members’ willingness to invest in home government bonds. We randomly manipulate the framing of the bond to measure heterogeneity in willingness to buy the home country government bond. We find that national pride and a stake in economic development are the strongest drivers for an individual’s choice to invest in a home country bond. We corroborate these findings with follow-up interviews that reveal the resonance of appeals to national identity and developmental support. The findings have implications for the design and marketing of diaspora bonds.

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Appendix
Available only for authorised users
Footnotes
1
World Bank estimates of personal remittances received (current US$) Series: BX.TRF.PWKR.CD.DT.
 
2
We use the term diaspora to refer to both migrants and their descendants, since both can maintain a strong attachment to the “homeland,” even if the descendants of migrants are born in their country of residence.
 
3
Members of the diaspora can be constrained in their ability to invest in their homeland by capital controls or restrictions on non-resident investment. Our study focuses on their motivation rather than their right to invest, as laws on foreign investment vary considerably.
 
4
Notable exceptions are Graham (2013, 2019)
 
5
The pre-registered hypotheses can be found at https://​doi.​org/​10.​17605/​OSF.​IO/​T5GMX.
 
6
In the context of U.S. war bonds, the marketing of 1919 “Liberty Loans” after public opinion and the mid-term elections had turned against Woodrow Wilson, sought to emphasize that buying loans was a patriotic expression of support for the country, rather than partisan support for Wilson, with Treasury materials saying, “No party is seeking to borrow money: the American Government is making the loan” (Dixon, 1995, 74)
 
7
The parallel to patriotic investment in domestic bonds here is in the enlisting of Boy Scout troops and women’s groups to market WWI-era “Liberty Loans” (Hilt & Rahn, 2016).
 
8
We also pre-registered the following hypothesis under this heading, but since almost all respondents have close family members in their country of origin, we had insufficient variation to test this hypothesis: Individuals who have close family members living in their country of origin will be more likely to exhibit the dynamics described in H2.
 
9
As in previous hypotheses, this phrasing is taken from the marketing of the 2019 Pakistani Banao Certificate diaspora bond.
 
11
Embassy of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia to the Commonwealth of Australia (accessed 11/06/20): http://​www.​ethiopianembassy​.​net/​gerd/​
 
12
Salient Features of Pakistan Banao Certificates (accessed 11/06/20): https://​www.​pakistanbanaocer​tificates.​gov.​pk/​img/​infographic.​jpg
 
13
World Bank International Debt Statistics, Disbursements on external debt, general government sector (DT.DIS.DEGG.CD).
 
14
Note that due to U.S. law, we could only transfer U.S. Treasury bonds to U.S. citizens, so non-citizens received a $100 gift card instead.
 
15
We encountered a similar ceiling on our sample size with our India survey, which is why we jettisoned some design elements of the India survey in order to dedicate our statistical power toward testing our core hypotheses.
 
17
There is some imbalance in assignment to treatment, however, we verified that the randomization code worked correctly.
 
18
Respondents learned about credit ratings in the educational video they watched at the beginning of the exercise.
 
19
Our power analysis appears in Figure A.3 in Appendix A.
 
20
Respondents were incentivized with a $20 gift card.
 
21
Interview C. 01/26/2021.
 
22
Interview A. 01/26/2021.
 
23
Interview E. 01/27/2021.
 
24
Interview D. 01/27/2021.
 
25
Interview A. 01/26/2021.
 
26
Interview C. 01/26/2021.
 
27
Interview B. 01/26/2021.
 
28
Interview C. 01/26/2021.
 
29
Interview D. 01/27/2021.
 
30
Interview A. 01/26/2021.
 
31
Interview E. 01/27/2021.
 
32
News24 (2017).
 
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Metadata
Title
Migration and development finance: A survey experiment on diaspora bonds
Authors
Lindsay R. Dolan
Alexandra O. Zeitz
Publication date
06-10-2023
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
The Review of International Organizations / Issue 2/2024
Print ISSN: 1559-7431
Electronic ISSN: 1559-744X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11558-023-09505-4

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