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The
Impact of Aid on Recipient Behavior: A Micro-Level Dynamic Analysis of
Remittances, Schooling, Work, Consumption, Investment and Social
Mobility in Nicaragua.
Lykke E. Andersen, Bent Jesper Christensen & Oscar Molina
December 2005
Remittances
are a very important source of income for many Nicaraguan families. More
than 40% of all households receive remittances that on average amount to
12-15% of total household income in these households. More than 30% of
these households receive remittances at least monthly, implying that it
is a relatively stable source of income.
This
paper shows that remittances do tend to reduce the vulnerability of
households and increase their upward social mobility, at least as long
as the households do not depend too heavily on remittances.
However,
remittances also cause moral hazard problems. Nicaraguans tend to reduce
their labor supply in response to more remittances, and they also tend
to reduce their savings rates, both of which are detrimental to long run
economic growth.
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