Emigrant’s remittances, Dutch Disease and capital accumulation: The case of Mekong countries

Hiroyuki TAGUCHI, Ni LAR

Abstract


Abstract. This paper examines the sectoral and intertemporal impacts of international emigrant remittances by using a vector auto-regression (VAR) estimation focusing on Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Vietnam (CLMV countries). The reason for targeting the CLMV countries is that they have still depended largely on remittance-earnings from their emigrant workers in their economies, and that the macroeconomic impacts of received remittances would be critical for their sustainable growth. The empirical study identified the decline in manufacturing-service ratio (the Dutch Disease effect) as a sectoral effect of remittances, and also the decline in investment-consumption ratio (the deteriorated capital accumulation effect) as their intertemporal effect, judging from the causalities and dynamic responses from remittances to both ratio in the VAR estimation outcomes. The strategic implication is that the CLMV countries should establish a framework to mobilize their remittance-earnings for more productive use.

Keywords. Emigrant’s remittances, Dutch Disease, Capital accumulation, Vector auto-regression estimation.

JEL. F22, F66, O53.

Keywords


Emigrant’s remittances; Dutch Disease; Capital accumulation; Vector auto-regression estimation.

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1453/jeb.v4i4.1515

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