Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Demography. 2013 Aug;50(4):1279-301. doi: 10.1007/s13524-013-0195-3.
The economic impact of remittances on migrant-sending countries has been a subject of debate in the scholarly literature on migration. We consider the topic using a household-level approach. We use a new survey, "Georgia on the Move," to examine migrant-level, household-level, and contextual variables associated with the probability that a household in the Republic of Georgia receives remittances. We then apply propensity score matching to estimate how remittances affect particular types of household expenditures, savings, labor supply, health, and other measures of well-being. Separate analysis of the subsample of households with a migrant currently abroad distinguishes the effects of remittances from the effects of migration as such. In Georgia, remittances improve household economic well-being without, for the most part, producing the negative consequences often suggested in the literature. We find evidence for an important aspect that has not been widely discussed in prior studies: remittances foster the formation of social capital by increasing the amount of money that households give as gifts to other households.
侨汇对移民输出国的经济影响一直是移民研究文献中的一个争论点。我们使用家庭层面的方法来考虑这个问题。我们利用一项新的调查“格鲁吉亚在行动”,来考察与格鲁吉亚共和国家庭收到侨汇的概率相关的移民层面、家庭层面和背景变量。然后,我们运用倾向得分匹配来估计侨汇对特定类型的家庭支出、储蓄、劳动力供应、健康和其他幸福感衡量标准的影响。对有移民在国外的家庭的子样本进行单独分析,区分了侨汇的影响和移民本身的影响。在格鲁吉亚,侨汇改善了家庭的经济福祉,而在大多数情况下,并没有产生文献中经常提到的负面影响。我们发现了一个在先前研究中没有广泛讨论的重要方面的证据:侨汇通过增加家庭给予其他家庭的礼物金额,促进了社会资本的形成。