Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica

Econometric analysis has established a negative relationship between labor supply and remittances in Jamaica. The authors incorporate this ex-post evidence in a general equilibrium model to investigate economywide effects of increased remittance in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bussolo, Maurizio, Medvedev, Denis
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
GDP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/03/7405821/remittances-flip-side-general-equilibrium-analysis-remittances-labor-supply-responses-policy-options-jamaica
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7159
id okr-10986-7159
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic AGGREGATE EMPLOYMENT
AGGREGATE LEVEL
AGRICULTURE
AVERAGE ANNUAL GROWTH
AVERAGE WAGES
BARGAINING POWER
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BENCHMARK
BLACK MARKET
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
CHANGE IN LABOR SUPPLY
COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMER PRICE
CONSUMER PRICE INFLATION
CONSUMERS
CONSUMPTION DEMAND
CONSUMPTION GOODS
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
DEBT
DEMAND FUNCTION
DEMAND FUNCTIONS
DISPOSABLE INCOME
DISTRIBUTION OF REMITTANCES
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOWNWARD PRESSURE
DYNAMIC ADJUSTMENT
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
EFFECTS OF REMITTANCES
ELASTICITY
EMPLOYEE
EMPLOYMENT LEVEL
EMPLOYMENT LIKELIHOOD
EQUILIBRIUM
EQUILIBRIUM LEVEL
EQUILIBRIUM PRICES
EVOLUTION OF REMITTANCES
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORTS
FACTOR DEMAND
FACTOR PRICES
FACTOR RETURNS
FEMALE FAMILY MEMBERS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FIRING COST
FIRING COSTS
FISCAL POLICY
FLOWS OF REMITTANCES
GDP
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
HUMAN CAPITAL
IMPACT OF REMITTANCES
IMPORTANCE OF REMITTANCES
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME EFFECT
INCOME ELASTICITIES
INCOME TAXES
INCOMES
INCREASE IN LABOR
INCREASE IN REMITTANCES
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
INFLATION
INFLATION RATES
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCE
INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
JOB MARKET
JOB OFFERS
JOB SECURITY
LABOR COSTS
LABOR DEMAND
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKET PERFORMANCE
LABOR MARKET REGULATIONS
LABOR MARKET RIGIDITY
LABOR MARKETS
LABOR SUPPLY
LABOR UNION
LABOR UNIONS
MACROECONOMIC EFFECTS
MACROECONOMIC RESULTS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MERCHANDISE
MERCHANDISE EXPORTS
MERCHANDISE IMPORTS
MIGRANTS
MINIMUM WAGE
MINIMUM WAGES
MONETARY POLICY
NON-WAGE COSTS
NORMAL GOOD
OPEN ECONOMY
OPPORTUNITY COST
PAYROLL TAX
PAYROLL TAXES
PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS
PRICE CHANGE
PRICE INCREASE
PRIVATE SERVICES
PRODUCER PRICES
PRODUCTION INCREASES
PROTECTIONISM
PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL GDP
REAL WAGES
RECIPIENT COUNTRIES
RECIPIENT HOUSEHOLDS
RELATIVE PRICES
REMITTANCE
REMITTANCE FLOWS
REMITTANCE IMPACT
REMITTANCE INFLOWS
REMITTANCE RECEIPTS
REMITTANCES
SALES
SAVINGS
SERVICE SECTORS
SEVERANCE PAYMENTS
SMALL MANUFACTURING
SPREAD
SUBSTITUTION
SUBSTITUTION EFFECT
SUPPLY CURVE
SUPPLY EQUATION
SUPPLY FUNCTION
TAX REVENUES
TAXATION
TOTAL WAGE
TRADE BALANCE
TRANSFER MONEY
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
UNEMPLOYED
UNSKILLED LABOR
UNSKILLED WORKERS
UTILITY FUNCTION
VALUE ADDED
VOLATILITY
VOLUME OF REMITTANCES
WAGE GROWTH
WAGE RATE
WORKER
WORKERS
WORKING CONDITIONS
spellingShingle AGGREGATE EMPLOYMENT
AGGREGATE LEVEL
AGRICULTURE
AVERAGE ANNUAL GROWTH
AVERAGE WAGES
BARGAINING POWER
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BENCHMARK
BLACK MARKET
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
CHANGE IN LABOR SUPPLY
COMMERCE
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMER PRICE
CONSUMER PRICE INFLATION
CONSUMERS
CONSUMPTION DEMAND
CONSUMPTION GOODS
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
DEBT
DEMAND FUNCTION
DEMAND FUNCTIONS
DISPOSABLE INCOME
DISTRIBUTION OF REMITTANCES
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOWNWARD PRESSURE
DYNAMIC ADJUSTMENT
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
EFFECTS OF REMITTANCES
ELASTICITY
EMPLOYEE
EMPLOYMENT LEVEL
EMPLOYMENT LIKELIHOOD
EQUILIBRIUM
EQUILIBRIUM LEVEL
EQUILIBRIUM PRICES
EVOLUTION OF REMITTANCES
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORTS
FACTOR DEMAND
FACTOR PRICES
FACTOR RETURNS
FEMALE FAMILY MEMBERS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FIRING COST
FIRING COSTS
FISCAL POLICY
FLOWS OF REMITTANCES
GDP
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
HUMAN CAPITAL
IMPACT OF REMITTANCES
IMPORTANCE OF REMITTANCES
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME EFFECT
INCOME ELASTICITIES
INCOME TAXES
INCOMES
INCREASE IN LABOR
INCREASE IN REMITTANCES
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
INFLATION
INFLATION RATES
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCE
INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
JOB MARKET
JOB OFFERS
JOB SECURITY
LABOR COSTS
LABOR DEMAND
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKET PERFORMANCE
LABOR MARKET REGULATIONS
LABOR MARKET RIGIDITY
LABOR MARKETS
LABOR SUPPLY
LABOR UNION
LABOR UNIONS
MACROECONOMIC EFFECTS
MACROECONOMIC RESULTS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MERCHANDISE
MERCHANDISE EXPORTS
MERCHANDISE IMPORTS
MIGRANTS
MINIMUM WAGE
MINIMUM WAGES
MONETARY POLICY
NON-WAGE COSTS
NORMAL GOOD
OPEN ECONOMY
OPPORTUNITY COST
PAYROLL TAX
PAYROLL TAXES
PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS
PRICE CHANGE
PRICE INCREASE
PRIVATE SERVICES
PRODUCER PRICES
PRODUCTION INCREASES
PROTECTIONISM
PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL GDP
REAL WAGES
RECIPIENT COUNTRIES
RECIPIENT HOUSEHOLDS
RELATIVE PRICES
REMITTANCE
REMITTANCE FLOWS
REMITTANCE IMPACT
REMITTANCE INFLOWS
REMITTANCE RECEIPTS
REMITTANCES
SALES
SAVINGS
SERVICE SECTORS
SEVERANCE PAYMENTS
SMALL MANUFACTURING
SPREAD
SUBSTITUTION
SUBSTITUTION EFFECT
SUPPLY CURVE
SUPPLY EQUATION
SUPPLY FUNCTION
TAX REVENUES
TAXATION
TOTAL WAGE
TRADE BALANCE
TRANSFER MONEY
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
UNEMPLOYED
UNSKILLED LABOR
UNSKILLED WORKERS
UTILITY FUNCTION
VALUE ADDED
VOLATILITY
VOLUME OF REMITTANCES
WAGE GROWTH
WAGE RATE
WORKER
WORKERS
WORKING CONDITIONS
Bussolo, Maurizio
Medvedev, Denis
Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Jamaica
relation Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4143
description Econometric analysis has established a negative relationship between labor supply and remittances in Jamaica. The authors incorporate this ex-post evidence in a general equilibrium model to investigate economywide effects of increased remittance inflows. In this model, remittances reduce labor force participation by increasing the reservation wages of recipients. This exacerbates the real exchange rate appreciation, hurting Jamaica's export base and small manufacturing import-competing sector. Within the narrow margins of maneuver of a highly indebted government, the authors show that a revenue-neutral policy response of a simultaneous reduction in payroll taxes and increase in sales taxes can effectively counteract these potentially negative effects of remittances.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Bussolo, Maurizio
Medvedev, Denis
author_facet Bussolo, Maurizio
Medvedev, Denis
author_sort Bussolo, Maurizio
title Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica
title_short Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica
title_full Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica
title_fullStr Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica
title_full_unstemmed Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica
title_sort do remittances have a flip side? a general equilibrium analysis of remittances, labor supply responses, and policy options for jamaica
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/03/7405821/remittances-flip-side-general-equilibrium-analysis-remittances-labor-supply-responses-policy-options-jamaica
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7159
_version_ 1764401521599971328
spelling okr-10986-71592021-04-23T14:02:33Z Do Remittances Have a Flip Side? A General Equilibrium Analysis of Remittances, Labor Supply Responses, and Policy Options for Jamaica Bussolo, Maurizio Medvedev, Denis AGGREGATE EMPLOYMENT AGGREGATE LEVEL AGRICULTURE AVERAGE ANNUAL GROWTH AVERAGE WAGES BARGAINING POWER BARRIERS TO ENTRY BENCHMARK BLACK MARKET BUDGET CONSTRAINTS CHANGE IN LABOR SUPPLY COMMERCE COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMER PRICE CONSUMER PRICE INFLATION CONSUMERS CONSUMPTION DEMAND CONSUMPTION GOODS CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT DEBT DEMAND FUNCTION DEMAND FUNCTIONS DISPOSABLE INCOME DISTRIBUTION OF REMITTANCES DOMESTIC MARKET DOWNWARD PRESSURE DYNAMIC ADJUSTMENT ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE EFFECTS OF REMITTANCES ELASTICITY EMPLOYEE EMPLOYMENT LEVEL EMPLOYMENT LIKELIHOOD EQUILIBRIUM EQUILIBRIUM LEVEL EQUILIBRIUM PRICES EVOLUTION OF REMITTANCES EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORTS FACTOR DEMAND FACTOR PRICES FACTOR RETURNS FEMALE FAMILY MEMBERS FEMALE LABOR FEMALE LABOR FORCE FIRING COST FIRING COSTS FISCAL POLICY FLOWS OF REMITTANCES GDP GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATE HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATES HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS HUMAN CAPITAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES IMPORTANCE OF REMITTANCES INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME EFFECT INCOME ELASTICITIES INCOME TAXES INCOMES INCREASE IN LABOR INCREASE IN REMITTANCES INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS INFLATION INFLATION RATES INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL MARKETS INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCE INTERNATIONAL REMITTANCES INTERNATIONAL TRADE JOB MARKET JOB OFFERS JOB SECURITY LABOR COSTS LABOR DEMAND LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKET PERFORMANCE LABOR MARKET REGULATIONS LABOR MARKET RIGIDITY LABOR MARKETS LABOR SUPPLY LABOR UNION LABOR UNIONS MACROECONOMIC EFFECTS MACROECONOMIC RESULTS MARKET CONDITIONS MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE EXPORTS MERCHANDISE IMPORTS MIGRANTS MINIMUM WAGE MINIMUM WAGES MONETARY POLICY NON-WAGE COSTS NORMAL GOOD OPEN ECONOMY OPPORTUNITY COST PAYROLL TAX PAYROLL TAXES PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS PRICE CHANGE PRICE INCREASE PRIVATE SERVICES PRODUCER PRICES PRODUCTION INCREASES PROTECTIONISM PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT PUBLIC SERVICES REAL GDP REAL WAGES RECIPIENT COUNTRIES RECIPIENT HOUSEHOLDS RELATIVE PRICES REMITTANCE REMITTANCE FLOWS REMITTANCE IMPACT REMITTANCE INFLOWS REMITTANCE RECEIPTS REMITTANCES SALES SAVINGS SERVICE SECTORS SEVERANCE PAYMENTS SMALL MANUFACTURING SPREAD SUBSTITUTION SUBSTITUTION EFFECT SUPPLY CURVE SUPPLY EQUATION SUPPLY FUNCTION TAX REVENUES TAXATION TOTAL WAGE TRADE BALANCE TRANSFER MONEY TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO UNEMPLOYED UNSKILLED LABOR UNSKILLED WORKERS UTILITY FUNCTION VALUE ADDED VOLATILITY VOLUME OF REMITTANCES WAGE GROWTH WAGE RATE WORKER WORKERS WORKING CONDITIONS Econometric analysis has established a negative relationship between labor supply and remittances in Jamaica. The authors incorporate this ex-post evidence in a general equilibrium model to investigate economywide effects of increased remittance inflows. In this model, remittances reduce labor force participation by increasing the reservation wages of recipients. This exacerbates the real exchange rate appreciation, hurting Jamaica's export base and small manufacturing import-competing sector. Within the narrow margins of maneuver of a highly indebted government, the authors show that a revenue-neutral policy response of a simultaneous reduction in payroll taxes and increase in sales taxes can effectively counteract these potentially negative effects of remittances. 2012-06-05T18:53:17Z 2012-06-05T18:53:17Z 2007-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/03/7405821/remittances-flip-side-general-equilibrium-analysis-remittances-labor-supply-responses-policy-options-jamaica http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7159 English Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4143 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Latin America & Caribbean Jamaica