Abstract
Despite the sharply increasing remittances in developing countries (especially in the Asia-Pacific region), the relationship between remittances and domestic investment in recipient countries has not been fluently evidenced. This paper aims to fill the empirical gap in the Asia-Pacific region by investigating the impact of remittances on domestic investment with a sample including nineteen developing countries based on time series data from 1980 to2015. However, our findings contradict some evidence from other regions. The results robustly confirm that remittances have a negative impact on domestic investment in these countries. Our results also indicate that the annual GDP per capita growth, official development assistance, domestic credit, gross saving, and inflation have a positive impact on domestic investment, however, we conclude that the impact of trade openness on domestic investment has a negative sign in the study period. The paper also provides some policy suggestions with regard to remittance flows in this region.
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Tung, L. T. (2018). The impact of remittances on domestic investment in developing countries: Fresh evidence from the Asia-Pacific region. Organizations and Markets in Emerging Economies, 9(2), 193–211. https://doi.org/10.15388/OMEE.2018.10.00010
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