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Published in: Empirical Economics 3/2019

27-12-2017

Remittances and output growth volatility in developing countries: Does financial development dampen or magnify the effects?

Authors: Oluwatosin Adeniyi, Kazeem Ajide, Ibrahim D. Raheem

Published in: Empirical Economics | Issue 3/2019

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Abstract

The paper empirically investigated the relationship between remittance flows and output growth volatility for an extensive sample predominated by emerging and developing countries. Following this broad treatment, it goes further to estimate the extent to which the degree of financial development (FD) impacts on the remittances–growth volatility nexus. This novelty distinguishes the work from previous studies. Using the system-generalized method of moments estimator, which corrects for endogenity and omitted variable concerns, on data spanning the period 1996–2012 for a total of 71 countries some interesting findings ensued. One, both remittances and FD had growth volatility dampening effects. Two, the interaction between proxies for FD and remittances produced mixed results. Three, when volatility of FD is accounted for, the interactive term had mixed results. For instance, banking sector credit produces positive and insignificant coefficients, while private sector produced significant and negative coefficients. Summarily putting these results in other words, the counter-cyclicality of remittances was established, while the complementary dampening effect of financial development is dependent upon its measure. On the basis of the foregoing, a few related policy lessons are documented to conclude the paper.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
According to this report, the magnitude of remittances in many developing countries has surpassed official development assistance (ODA), private equity flows and foreign direct investment (FDI), and their rate of growth has outpaced that of official and private capital flows.
 
2
Remittances may be harmful to the long-run growth of recipient economies through an appreciation of the real exchange rate, which tends to be detrimental to the tradable sector and reduce the competitiveness of exports—a phenomenon known as the Dutch disease (Bourdet and Falck 2006; Acosta et al. 2009; Amuedo-Dorantes and Pozo 2004; Acosta et al. 2009).
 
3
This is a phenomenon in which some advanced industrialized economies like the US, UK, and France witnessed some sort of decline in the volatility of output growth and inflation rates. Conceptually speaking, these are believed to have stemmed from three main reasons fully explicated under different hypotheses like good luck, good policy and good practice, respectively (Blanchard and Simon 2001; McConnell and Perez-Quiros 2000; Stock and Watson 2002 are some of the papers with further empirical expositions).
 
4
Studies are silent about the computational process of this measure.
 
5
Unlike Ahamada and Coulibaly (2011) study which did not account for the effect of key control variables in their model, our study adequately improved on this shortcoming.
 
6
We acknowledge that the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) is another approach that can be used to measure volatility. We refrained from its use based on the debate that adeptly queries its suitability in cross-sectional time series analysis, such as we pursued in this paper.
 
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Metadata
Title
Remittances and output growth volatility in developing countries: Does financial development dampen or magnify the effects?
Authors
Oluwatosin Adeniyi
Kazeem Ajide
Ibrahim D. Raheem
Publication date
27-12-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Empirical Economics / Issue 3/2019
Print ISSN: 0377-7332
Electronic ISSN: 1435-8921
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00181-017-1375-6

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