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Welfare Effect of Foreign Migration and Remittances in Kosovo. Sachiko Miyata, World Bank Irina Shaorshadze, Cambridge University. Snapshot of Socio-Economic Indicators of Kosovo Data Description Methodology Results Conclusions and Policy Implications. Outline.
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Welfare Effect of Foreign Migration and Remittances in Kosovo Sachiko Miyata, World Bank Irina Shaorshadze, Cambridge University
Snapshot of Socio-Economic Indicators of Kosovo • Data Description • Methodology • Results • Conclusions and Policy Implications Outline
Poorest economy in Europe, GDP per capita 1,759 Euro (2008) • 45% of households live in Poverty, 15% live in Extreme Poverty • Remittances are the second largest source of income (15.1% of GDP) • Ranks #11 in the world in terms of share of remittances to GDP • 30% of households have migrant relations abroad • Over 20% of households receive remittances • Population is approximately 2.2 million, although no census conducted since 1981 • 92% Ethnic Albanian, 5.3% Serbian, 2.7 Other Minorities. Socio-Economic Indicators of Kosovo
Household Budget Survey and Migration Survey of 2009 • Stratified by Regions and Urban/Rural Areas, Ethnic composition • Migration drawn from same master frame as HBS and has 60% overlap (1,717 Households) • HBS took place over 12 months • Migration Survey conducted over 3 months period (April, May, June), based on recall of past 12 months Data Description
Main welfare indicator is consumption per household • (Does not include own consumption) • Poverty measure is based on cost to meet basic needs per adult equivalent, which in 2002 prices is set at 43 Euros per month • Headcount Poverty Rate (Share of Households bellow poverty line corresponding to their size and composition) Welfare and Poverty Indicators
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
Descriptive Statistics by Presence of Migrants and Remittances
a) Consumption Effect of 1) Remittances 2) Migration • b) Poverty Effect of: 1) Remittances 2) Migration • c) Inequality Effect of Remittances Welfare Effect of Migration and Remittances
Analyze effect of Migration and Remittances separately • Migrant and remittances recipient households not overlapping groups • Migrant relations may affect welfare through means other than remittances – business connection, knowhow, etc. • But… Welfare Effect of Migration and Remittances – Methodology Motivation
Analyze effect of Migration and Remittances separately • Migrant and remittances recipient households not overlapping groups • Migrant relations may affect welfare through means other than remittances – business connection, knowhow, etc. • Migrant households may be selected non-randomly from the population Welfare Effect of Migration and Remittances – Methodology Motivation
Analyze effect of Migration and Remittances separately • Migrant and remittances recipient households not overlapping groups • Migrant relations may affect welfare through means other than remittances – business connection, knowhow, etc. • Migrant households may be selected non-randomly from the population • Remittances recipient households maybe selected non-randomly from migrant households Welfare Effect of Migration and Remittances – Methodology Motivation
Analyze effect of Migration and Remittances separately • Migrant and remittances recipient households not overlapping groups • Migrant relations may affect welfare through means other than remittances – business connection, knowhow, etc. • Migrant households may be selected non-randomly from the population • Remittances recipient households maybe selected non-randomly from migrant households • If we do not correct for selection, estimates for the effect of remittances and migration will be biased. Welfare Effect of Migration and Remittances – Methodology Motivation
Analyze effect of Migration and Remittances separately • Migrant and remittances recipient households not overlapping groups • Migrant relations may affect welfare through means other than remittances – business connection, knowhow, etc. • Migrant households may be selected non-randomly from the population • Remittances recipient households maybe selected non-randomly from migrant households • If we do not correct for selection, estimates for the effect of remittances and migration will be biased. • Estimate Treatment Effect Model to control for selection • Bivariate Probit Welfare Effect of Migration and Remittances – methodology motivation
Impact of REMITTANCES On Consumption Per Capita C – Log Consumption Per Capita T* - Latent Variable that measures propensity to receive REMITTANCES • Two Stage Treatment Effect Model • Full Information Maximum Likelihood
Impact of MIGRATION On Consumption Per Capita C – Log Consumption Per Capita M* - Latent Variable that measures propensity to Have MIGRANT Relations • Two Stage Treatment Effect Model • Full Information Maximum Likelihood
Remittances: • P* - Latent Variable measuring propensity to be Poor • Bivariate Probit • Migration: Poverty Impact of Migration and Remittances
Share of households in the Strata that have migrant relationship in 2005 (lagged migration network) • Migrant networks lower the costs of migration • Providing information on job opportunities outside Kosovo • Ensure the smooth transition to the migration destination. • Supply credit • Cover reallocation expenses Exclusion Restriction
We assume lagged migrant network affect consumption only through increased likelihood of having migrants and receiving remittances • Migrant networks may affect local infrastructure, raise capital stock, etc • This may improve welfare of households with and without remittances • This would lead to downward bias on our estimate of affect of remittances on welfare Exclusion Restriction - Caveat
Inequality Measure is Variance of Log Consumption Per Capita • Use variance decomposition methodology developed by Fields (2004), extended by Silber, Hanchane and Dumas (2010) • Divide households into groups that receive and do not receive transfers • Between Group variance • Within Group Variance Effect of Remittances on Inequality
Explanatory Variables -------Mills ratio------ --------Residual------- Transfers------ Effect of Remittances on InequalityContribution to Contribution to Between Group Within Group Variance Variance