4.3 Article

Remembrances of things past: evidence from a twenty-year Kerala panel

Journal

JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES
Volume 49, Issue 20, Pages 5305-5321

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1369183X.2024.2268994

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This study constructs a panel dataset from five consecutive Kerala Migration Surveys to examine the determinants of migration and remittances. The findings suggest that migration and remittance behavior exhibit positive serial correlation over a five-year period, and the presence of a return migrant in the household increases the likelihood of migration and remittances. Additionally, the gender of the household head, employment status, age, and asset-poverty of the household also play a role in migration and remittance decisions.
We construct a panel of 242 households from five consecutive Kerala Migration Surveys that span 20 years at five-year intervals to study the fundamental determinants of the decision to migrate abroad as well as the decision to remit. Accounting for time-invariant unobservables and allowing migration and remittance behavior to depend upon previous choices clarifies our understanding of both decisions. Migration and remittance behavior display positive serial correlation over a five-year time horizon and the presence of a return migrant in the household increases the likelihood of migration by 13% and remittances by 4%. Migration is 1% more likely in female-headed households, 4% less likely when the household head is employed, increases by 0.4% for each additional year of the household head's age and is 6% more likely in households that are asset-poor. Remittances are between 20% and 70% more likely to obtain when the migrant was married at the time of migration and 3% less likely when the household head is employed, the latter suggesting either an old-age security or a co-insurance motive. Evidence in favor of a very strong inheritance competition motive is found in that each additional male heir increases the likelihood of remittances by between 8% and 31%. Based on our econometric evidence, and in particular our findings pertaining to serial correlation and the presence of a return migrant in the household, it is likely that both migration from and remittances to Kerala will quickly rebound to their pre-pandemic levels.

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