Remittances and Poverty in Ghana

The author uses a large, nationally representative household survey to analyze the impact of internal remittances (from Ghana) and international remittances (from African and other countries) on poverty in Ghana. With only one exception, he finds that both types of remittances reduce the level, depth, and severity of poverty in Ghana. But the size of the poverty reduction depends on how poverty is being measured. The author finds that poverty is reduced more when international, as opposed to internal, remittances are included in household income, and when poverty is measured by the more sensitive poverty measures-poverty gap and squared poverty gap. For example, the squared poverty gap measure shows that including international remittances in household expenditure (income) reduces the severity of poverty by 34.8 percent, while including internal remittances in such income reduces the severity of poverty by only 4.1 percent. International remittances reduce the severity of poverty more than internal remittances because of the differential impact of these two types of remittances on poor households. Households in the poorest decile group receive 22.7 percent of their total household expenditure (income) from international remittances, as opposed to only 13.8 percent of such income from internal remittances. When these "poorest of the poor" households receive international remittances, their income status changes dramatically and this in turn has a large effect on any poverty measure-like the squared poverty gap-that considers both the number and distance of poor households beneath the poverty line.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adams, Richard H. Jr.
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-02
Subjects:AMOUNT OF REMITTANCES, CAPITA EXPENDITURE, CAPITA INCOME, CASE STUDY, DEVELOPMENT ISSUES, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH GROUP, DISTURBANCE TERM, ECONOMETRIC MODEL, ECONOMETRIC TECHNIQUES, ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, ECONOMIC THEORY, EFFECT OF REMITTANCES, EXPENDITURE DATA, EXPENDITURE DISTRIBUTION, EXPLANATORY VARIABLES, HEADCOUNT INDEX, HEADCOUNT MEASURE, HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTIC, HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS, HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURE, HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS, HOUSEHOLD SIZE, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, ILLEGAL MIGRANTS, IMPACT OF REMITTANCES, INCOME, INCOME DATA, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INCOME INEQUALITY, INCOMES, INTERNAL MIGRANTS, INTERNAL MIGRATION, INTERNATIONAL MIGRANT, INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS, INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION, INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCES, LABOR FORCE, LIVING STANDARDS, LIVING STANDARDS SURVEY, MIGRANT, MIGRANT HOUSEHOLDS, MIGRANTS, NATIONAL LEVEL, NATIONAL POVERTY, NON-FOOD GOODS, NON-FOOD ITEMS, NON-POOR HOUSEHOLDS, PARAMETER ESTIMATES, PER CAPITA INCOME, POLICY RESEARCH, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, POOR PERSON, POVERTY, POVERTY GAP, POVERTY LINE, POVERTY MEASURE, POVERTY MEASURES, POVERTY RATES, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY STATUS, REGRESSORS, REMITTANCE, REMITTANCE FLOWS, REMITTANCE RECEIVING, REMITTANCE RECEIVING HOUSEHOLDS, REMITTANCE-RECEIVING HOUSEHOLDS, REMITTANCES, REMITTERS, RURAL AREAS, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, SQUARED POVERTY GAP, TYPES OF REMITTANCES, URBAN AREAS, VALUE OF REMITTANCES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/02/6567848/remittances-poverty-ghana
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8781
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Summary:The author uses a large, nationally representative household survey to analyze the impact of internal remittances (from Ghana) and international remittances (from African and other countries) on poverty in Ghana. With only one exception, he finds that both types of remittances reduce the level, depth, and severity of poverty in Ghana. But the size of the poverty reduction depends on how poverty is being measured. The author finds that poverty is reduced more when international, as opposed to internal, remittances are included in household income, and when poverty is measured by the more sensitive poverty measures-poverty gap and squared poverty gap. For example, the squared poverty gap measure shows that including international remittances in household expenditure (income) reduces the severity of poverty by 34.8 percent, while including internal remittances in such income reduces the severity of poverty by only 4.1 percent. International remittances reduce the severity of poverty more than internal remittances because of the differential impact of these two types of remittances on poor households. Households in the poorest decile group receive 22.7 percent of their total household expenditure (income) from international remittances, as opposed to only 13.8 percent of such income from internal remittances. When these "poorest of the poor" households receive international remittances, their income status changes dramatically and this in turn has a large effect on any poverty measure-like the squared poverty gap-that considers both the number and distance of poor households beneath the poverty line.