While recent literature has pointed out that migrants’ remittances have a positive impact on savings with financial institutions, findings with respect to access to and the use of loans have been ambiguous. This paper investigates whether the reception of remittances facilitates taking up loans from formal or informal sources among Mexican households and finds positive and statistically significant effects of remittances on borrowing and on the existence of debts. We address methodological concerns of selection bias and reverse causality through household fixed effects and an instrumental strategy that exploits distance to train lines and labor market conditions in the US as exogenous determinants of remittances
This dissertation examines the determinants, motivations and effects of remittances. In that last tw...
Financial development is commonly identified as an important condition for fostering investment and ...
We use a randomized field experiment to estimate the effect of having a United States bank account o...
In policy discussions, it has frequently been claimed that migrants’ remittances could function as a...
Mexican migration to the United States is not a new phenomenon, but through increased globalization,...
Despite the rising volume of remittances flowing to developing countries, their impact on banking se...
Data from 154 different Mexican communities, housed within the Mexican Migration Project (mmp), is u...
This article studies the link between migration, remittances and asset accumulation for a panel of p...
Migration reshapes rural economies in ways that may go beyond the contribution of migrant remittance...
This paper explores the impact of remittances on poverty, education, and health in 11 Latin American...
The study attempts to examine the impact of remittances on macroeconomic activities (private consum...
The assumption that remittances are a substitute for credit has been an implicit or explicit theoret...
Using a recent Spanish database on immigrants from all across the globe, we show that remittances re...
The objective of this paper is to present microeconomic evidence on the economic effects of internat...
This chapter reviews the recent theoretical and empirical economic literature on migrants' remittanc...
This dissertation examines the determinants, motivations and effects of remittances. In that last tw...
Financial development is commonly identified as an important condition for fostering investment and ...
We use a randomized field experiment to estimate the effect of having a United States bank account o...
In policy discussions, it has frequently been claimed that migrants’ remittances could function as a...
Mexican migration to the United States is not a new phenomenon, but through increased globalization,...
Despite the rising volume of remittances flowing to developing countries, their impact on banking se...
Data from 154 different Mexican communities, housed within the Mexican Migration Project (mmp), is u...
This article studies the link between migration, remittances and asset accumulation for a panel of p...
Migration reshapes rural economies in ways that may go beyond the contribution of migrant remittance...
This paper explores the impact of remittances on poverty, education, and health in 11 Latin American...
The study attempts to examine the impact of remittances on macroeconomic activities (private consum...
The assumption that remittances are a substitute for credit has been an implicit or explicit theoret...
Using a recent Spanish database on immigrants from all across the globe, we show that remittances re...
The objective of this paper is to present microeconomic evidence on the economic effects of internat...
This chapter reviews the recent theoretical and empirical economic literature on migrants' remittanc...
This dissertation examines the determinants, motivations and effects of remittances. In that last tw...
Financial development is commonly identified as an important condition for fostering investment and ...
We use a randomized field experiment to estimate the effect of having a United States bank account o...