Migration, remittances and well-being in Kosovo

Millions of people worldwide choose migration as a livelihood strategy, with the households and communities staying behind relying heavily on remittance inflows. The question of whether migration is beneficial to the households and individuals staying behind is an important one, because the effects may occur in different spheres and over time and they may not always be straightforward. This calls for a detailed examination of how migration affects the well-being of households and individuals staying behind in migrant-sending communities. Accordingly, this thesis evaluates the effects of participation in international migration and remittances on the well-being of households and individuals in migrant-sending communities in Kosovo. Adopting a pluralistic conceptualization of well-being and utilizing a mix of quantitative and qualitative methods of investigation, it advances the current global migration debate on the effects of migration on the development processes in low- and middle-income economies. First, the dynamic effects of migration and remittances on households' poverty and income distribution are estimated. Based on a nationally representative dataset and using state-of-the-art matching techniques, we measure impacts based on counterfactual scenarios, and, for the first time, take a step forward by applying a dose-response function approach to assess poverty effects due to variations in the time-length of receiving remittances. Our findings show that remittances alleviate both absolute and relative poverty levels and lead to marginal increases in inequality for the case of Kosovo. We further demonstrate that - although poverty reduction effects are stronger in the short-run - remittances have a positive poverty reduction effect over time. The effects of migration and remittances on households' expenditure behavior are further assessed. The empirical results indicate that participation in migration reduces households' budget share for household food consumption with no immediate impact on households' budgetary allocations for business investments, health, and education expenditures. Our interpretation of such findings is that participation in migration does not cause substantive changes on the spending behavior of households with migrant family members, while remittances are predominantly used to cover basic consumption needs. Second, participation in migration and remitting patterns are linked to broader and sometimes contradicting outcomes of well-being. Utilizing a case study research approach, we provide an in-depth analysis of these complex interlinkages between migration, remittances, and the well-being of migrant-sending communities. While we illustrate how remittances often protect families from poverty, there are negative outcomes as well. Social comparisons to migrants influence the migration aspirations and the subjective well-being of individuals in the village communities. Together with the delineation of a minimum remittance income, it turns into a barrier for participation in the local labor markets. In particular, women's disengagement from work leads to increased vulnerability and economic dependency with negative implications for their empowerment and well-being. Our research contributes to the most recent migration research in three main aspects. First, the study applies novel econometric techniques to estimate dynamic welfare effects of migration. Given the scarcity of panel data in our fled of study, the approach opens a new methodological venue for future impact assessments in the absence of longitudinal data. Second, the analysis of the broader well-being outcomes of migration shows how the current migration and development agenda should be redefined to recognize improvements in well-being as a dynamic process that includes not only material welfare, but also aspects such as happiness, independence, empowerment and more. Third, our empirical findings contribute to closing an empirical gap in research by highlighting migration and remittance effects in the highly remittance-dependent, but under-researched European and Central Asian transition economies.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 1423211785530 Arapi-Gjini, A. (ed.), 1423211767524 Leibniz Inst. of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies, Halle (Germany) eng
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Leibniz ( Germany) IAMO 2022
Subjects:migration, communities, resource allocation, livelihood strategies, remittances,
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