Remittances, Regime Type, and Government Spending Priorities

Previous work suggests that remittances enable governments to reduce spending on public services and divert resources to serve their own interests. We argue this need not occur. Building on recent work which shows that the impact of remittances is contingent on the domestic environment in remittance...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in comparative international development 2017-09, Vol.52 (3), p.349-371
Hauptverfasser: Easton, Malcolm R., Montinola, Gabriella R.
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description Previous work suggests that remittances enable governments to reduce spending on public services and divert resources to serve their own interests. We argue this need not occur. Building on recent work which shows that the impact of remittances is contingent on the domestic environment in remittance-receiving countries, we hypothesize that (1) remittances are more likely to increase government spending on public services in democracies than in autocracies and (2) remittances are more likely to finance activities that deter political competition in autocracies than in democracies. Using a sample of 105 developing countries from 1985 through 2008, we find strong support for our hypotheses when examining the impact of remittances on public education, health, and military spending. We also provide suggestive evidence for the mechanism underpinning our results: micro-level evidence on remittance recipients’ preferences and political engagement.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Business Source Complete (EB_SDU_P3); PAIS Index; Political Science Complete (EB_SDU_P3); Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Austerity policy
Autocracy
Competition
Defense spending
Democracy
Developing countries
Finance
Government finance
Government spending
Health education
LDCs
Political aspects
Political finance
Political participation
Politics
Priorities
Public expenditures
Public services
Remittances
Social Sciences
Social services
title Remittances, Regime Type, and Government Spending Priorities
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