Article

Neighbouring countries and bilateral remittances: a global study

Thibault Laurent, Paula Margaretic, and Christine Thomas-Agnan

Abstract

We measure to what extent neighbouring countries affect the amount of remittances between a source and a recipient country, controlling for the commonly used macro determinants of remittances. We provide novel evidence on the importance of neighbouring countries, with the parameter estimates capturing origin and destination spatial dependence being positive and significant. Disregarding the role of neighbouring countries leads to biased estimates and misprediction. Indeed, when we correctly account for the role of neighbouring countries, prediction errors decrease by 44% when we express bilateral remittances in nominal terms and by 31% when remittances are in logarithm. Next, we present evidence supporting the altruism, the investment and the financial friction motives to remit, with the altruism motive being the one that contributes the most to explain expected remittances. As an application of our model, we show that, following the Covid-19 shock, remittances are expected to decrease less in countries with smaller income per capita. This is good news for low- to middle-income countries.

JEL codes

  • F24: Remittances
  • R23: Regional Migration • Regional Labor Markets • Population • Neighborhood Characteristics

Reference

Thibault Laurent, Paula Margaretic, and Christine Thomas-Agnan, Neighbouring countries and bilateral remittances: a global study, Spatial Economic Analysis, vol. 17, n. 4, June 2022, pp. 557–584.

Published in

Spatial Economic Analysis, vol. 17, n. 4, June 2022, pp. 557–584