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International migration,remittances, and schooling: evidence from El Salvador
Affiliation:1. Department of Finance and Economics, La Trobe University, VIC 3083, Australia;2. East West University, Bangladesh;3. Faculty of Social Science and Humanities, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Malaysia;4. Department of Management and Engineering, SE 58183 Linköping, Sweden;5. COMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Pakistan;1. University of Pau, CATT, France;2. Paris Sciences et Lettres, Paris-Dauphine University, LEDa, DIAL UMR 225, FR-75016 Paris, France;1. Université de Lyon, Lyon F-69007, France;2. CNRS, GATE Lyon Saint-Etienne, 93 Chemin des Mouilles, Ecully F-69130, France;3. IZA, Bonn, Germany
Abstract:We examine the effect of remittances from abroad on households' schooling decisions using data for El Salvador. Following the massive war-related emigration of the 1980s, remittances became a significant source of household income throughout the 1990s. We use the Cox proportional hazard model to examine the determinants of school attendance. Measuring income from a source that is uncorrelated with parental schooling—remittances—, we find that remittances have a large, significant effect on school retention. We estimate that while household income net of remittances has a small, though significant, impact on the hazard of leaving school in rural and urban areas, remittances have a much larger impact on the hazard of leaving school. In urban areas, the effect of remittances is, at its smallest, 10 times the size of the effect of other income. In rural areas, the effect of remittances is about 2.6 times that of other income. Our finding is of interest in that it suggests that subsidizing school attendance, particularly in poor areas, may have a large impact on school attendance and retention, even if parents have low levels of schooling.
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