Abstract

This study researches the impact of international remittances on poverty reduction in six former Soviet Union countries. The countries where personal international remittances are equal to more than 5% of GDP and rents from natural resources are below 10% of GDP are selected as the units of measurement. This study uses a fixed effect model with robust standard errors to reveal any types of causality. According to the regression results, a 10% increase in remittance inflow reduces headcount ratio, poverty gap, and poverty severity at $1.90 per day poverty line by 4.8, 5.9 and 6.4%, respectively. In addition, the same level of increase in remittances reduces poverty headcount ratio by 3.3% and poverty gap by 3.7% at the poverty line of $3.20 per day. Additionally, pooled OLS regression results reveal that remittance inflow has a negative impact on poverty level in the above-mentioned six resource-poor countries.

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