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Are Remittances Insurance? Evidence from Rainfall Shocks in the Philippines

Dean YangDean Yang (corresponding author) is an assistant professor at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and in the Department of Economics at the University of Michigan; his email address isHwaJung ChoiHwaJung Choi is a PhD candidate in economics at the University of Michigan; her email address is
2007en
ABI

Аннотация

Do remittances sent by overseas migrants serve as insurance for recipient households? In a study of how remittances from overseas respond to income shocks experienced by Philippine households, changes in income are found to lead to changes in remittances in the opposite direction, consistent with an insurance motivation. Roughly 60 percent of declines in household income are replaced by remittance inflows from overseas. Because household income and remittances are jointly determined, rainfall shocks are used as instrumental variables for income changes. The hypothesis cannot be rejected that consumption in households with migrant members is unchanged in response to income shocks, whereas consumption responds strongly to income shocks in households without migrants.

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