Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?

The authors combine the literature on financial crises in emerging markets and developing economies with that on international migrations by investigating whether the increasingly large flows of workers' remittances can help reduce the probability of current account reversals. The rationale for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bugamelli, Matteo, Paternò, Francesco
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/11/6399379/workers-remittances-reduce-probability-current-account-reversals
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8495
id okr-10986-8495
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-84952021-04-23T14:02:43Z Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals? Bugamelli, Matteo Paternò, Francesco ABSOLUTE VALUE ADVANCED COUNTRIES BALANCE OF PAYMENTS CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL INFLOWS CAPITAL MOVEMENTS COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING COUNTRY GROWTH REGRESSIONS COUNTRY OF ORIGIN COUNTRY VARIANCE CURRENCY CRISES CURRENT ACCOUNT CURRENT ACCOUNT ADJUSTMENTS CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS CURRENT ACCOUNT REVERSALS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING ECONOMIES DOMESTIC CREDIT ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC OUTLOOK ECONOMIC RESEARCH EMERGING COUNTRIES EMERGING MARKETS EMPIRICAL STUDIES EXCHANGE ARRANGEMENTS EXCHANGE RATE ARRANGEMENTS EXCHANGE RATES EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS EXPORTS EXTERNAL DEBT EXTERNAL DEBT SERVICE FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCIAL INSTABILITY FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL OPENNESS FINANCIAL STABILITY FOREIGN CAPITAL FOREIGN CURRENCIES FOREIGN CURRENCY FOREIGN DEBT FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GDP PER CAPITA GROWTH RATE HIGH REAL INTEREST RATES INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL RESERVES MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MEDIAN VALUE MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES NATIONAL AUTHORITIES OUTPUT VOLATILITY POLICY RESEARCH POSITIVE EFFECTS PRIVATE CREDIT PUBLIC DEBT REAL EXCHANGE REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL INTEREST REAL INTEREST RATE REAL INTEREST RATES SHORT TERM DEBT SOVEREIGN DEBT STANDARD DEVIATION STATISTICAL DATA TERMS OF TRADE TIME SERIES TOTAL EXTERNAL DEBT TOTAL OUTPUT TRADE OPENNESS The authors combine the literature on financial crises in emerging markets and developing economies with that on international migrations by investigating whether the increasingly large flows of workers' remittances can help reduce the probability of current account reversals. The rationale for this stands in the great stability and low cyclicality of remittances as compared with other private capital flows: these properties, combined with the fact that remittances are cheap inflows of foreign currencies, might reduce the probability that foreign investors suddenly flee out of emerging markets and developing economies and trigger a dramatic current account adjustment. The authors find that remittances can have such a beneficial effect. In particular, they show that a high level of remittances, as a ratio of GDP, makes the relationship between a decreasing stock of international reserves (over GDP) and a higher probability of current account crises less stringent. The same occurs, though less neatly, for the positive relationship between an increasing stock of external debt (over GDP) and the probability of current account reversals. The results point also to a threshold effect of remittances: the mechanisms just described are, in fact, much stronger when remittances are above 3 percent of GDP. 2012-06-19T21:50:45Z 2012-06-19T21:50:45Z 2005-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/11/6399379/workers-remittances-reduce-probability-current-account-reversals http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8495 English Policy Research Working Paper; No. 3766 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ABSOLUTE VALUE
ADVANCED COUNTRIES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
CAPITAL MOVEMENTS
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING
COUNTRY GROWTH REGRESSIONS
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
COUNTRY VARIANCE
CURRENCY CRISES
CURRENT ACCOUNT
CURRENT ACCOUNT ADJUSTMENTS
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS
CURRENT ACCOUNT REVERSALS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
DOMESTIC CREDIT
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
EMERGING COUNTRIES
EMERGING MARKETS
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
EXCHANGE ARRANGEMENTS
EXCHANGE RATE ARRANGEMENTS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT SERVICE
FINANCIAL CRISES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL INSTABILITY
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL OPENNESS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FOREIGN CAPITAL
FOREIGN CURRENCIES
FOREIGN CURRENCY
FOREIGN DEBT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTORS
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GROWTH RATE
HIGH REAL INTEREST RATES
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MEDIAN VALUE
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
NATIONAL AUTHORITIES
OUTPUT VOLATILITY
POLICY RESEARCH
POSITIVE EFFECTS
PRIVATE CREDIT
PUBLIC DEBT
REAL EXCHANGE
REAL EXCHANGE RATE
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATE
REAL INTEREST RATES
SHORT TERM DEBT
SOVEREIGN DEBT
STANDARD DEVIATION
STATISTICAL DATA
TERMS OF TRADE
TIME SERIES
TOTAL EXTERNAL DEBT
TOTAL OUTPUT
TRADE OPENNESS
spellingShingle ABSOLUTE VALUE
ADVANCED COUNTRIES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
CAPITAL MOVEMENTS
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING
COUNTRY GROWTH REGRESSIONS
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
COUNTRY VARIANCE
CURRENCY CRISES
CURRENT ACCOUNT
CURRENT ACCOUNT ADJUSTMENTS
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS
CURRENT ACCOUNT REVERSALS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
DOMESTIC CREDIT
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
EMERGING COUNTRIES
EMERGING MARKETS
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
EXCHANGE ARRANGEMENTS
EXCHANGE RATE ARRANGEMENTS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT SERVICE
FINANCIAL CRISES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL INSTABILITY
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL OPENNESS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FOREIGN CAPITAL
FOREIGN CURRENCIES
FOREIGN CURRENCY
FOREIGN DEBT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTORS
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GROWTH RATE
HIGH REAL INTEREST RATES
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MEDIAN VALUE
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
NATIONAL AUTHORITIES
OUTPUT VOLATILITY
POLICY RESEARCH
POSITIVE EFFECTS
PRIVATE CREDIT
PUBLIC DEBT
REAL EXCHANGE
REAL EXCHANGE RATE
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATE
REAL INTEREST RATES
SHORT TERM DEBT
SOVEREIGN DEBT
STANDARD DEVIATION
STATISTICAL DATA
TERMS OF TRADE
TIME SERIES
TOTAL EXTERNAL DEBT
TOTAL OUTPUT
TRADE OPENNESS
Bugamelli, Matteo
Paternò, Francesco
Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?
relation Policy Research Working Paper; No. 3766
description The authors combine the literature on financial crises in emerging markets and developing economies with that on international migrations by investigating whether the increasingly large flows of workers' remittances can help reduce the probability of current account reversals. The rationale for this stands in the great stability and low cyclicality of remittances as compared with other private capital flows: these properties, combined with the fact that remittances are cheap inflows of foreign currencies, might reduce the probability that foreign investors suddenly flee out of emerging markets and developing economies and trigger a dramatic current account adjustment. The authors find that remittances can have such a beneficial effect. In particular, they show that a high level of remittances, as a ratio of GDP, makes the relationship between a decreasing stock of international reserves (over GDP) and a higher probability of current account crises less stringent. The same occurs, though less neatly, for the positive relationship between an increasing stock of external debt (over GDP) and the probability of current account reversals. The results point also to a threshold effect of remittances: the mechanisms just described are, in fact, much stronger when remittances are above 3 percent of GDP.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Bugamelli, Matteo
Paternò, Francesco
author_facet Bugamelli, Matteo
Paternò, Francesco
author_sort Bugamelli, Matteo
title Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?
title_short Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?
title_full Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?
title_fullStr Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?
title_full_unstemmed Do Workers' Remittances Reduce the Probability of Current Account Reversals?
title_sort do workers' remittances reduce the probability of current account reversals?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/11/6399379/workers-remittances-reduce-probability-current-account-reversals
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8495
_version_ 1764407943440105472