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Do Migrants' Remittances Decline over Time? Evidence from Tongans and Western Samoans in Australia
by
Brown, Richard P C
in
Assets
/ Australia
/ Behavior
/ Cooperation
/ Data Collection
/ Demography
/ Developed Countries
/ Developing Countries
/ Disposable income
/ Economic aspects
/ Economic conditions
/ Economic migration
/ Economics
/ Emigration
/ Emigration and Immigration
/ Empirical research
/ Estimates
/ Exchange rates
/ Family Relations
/ Financial Management
/ Financial Support
/ Head of household
/ Homes
/ Host country
/ Human migration
/ Hypotheses
/ Immigrants
/ Income estimates
/ Income level
/ Investments
/ Islands
/ LDCs
/ Migrant communities
/ Migrant remittances
/ Migrant workers
/ Migrants
/ Migration
/ Money
/ Motivation
/ Oceanic Cultural Groups
/ Pacific Islanders
/ Pacific Islands
/ Pacific Region
/ Parents
/ Polynesia
/ Population
/ Population Dynamics
/ Psychology
/ Recessions
/ Regression analysis
/ Remittances
/ Samoa
/ Samoans
/ Sampling Studies
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Standard of living
/ Studies
/ Sydney, Australia
/ Tonga
/ Tongans
/ Transients and Migrants
/ Trends
/ Western Samoans
1998
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Do Migrants' Remittances Decline over Time? Evidence from Tongans and Western Samoans in Australia
by
Brown, Richard P C
in
Assets
/ Australia
/ Behavior
/ Cooperation
/ Data Collection
/ Demography
/ Developed Countries
/ Developing Countries
/ Disposable income
/ Economic aspects
/ Economic conditions
/ Economic migration
/ Economics
/ Emigration
/ Emigration and Immigration
/ Empirical research
/ Estimates
/ Exchange rates
/ Family Relations
/ Financial Management
/ Financial Support
/ Head of household
/ Homes
/ Host country
/ Human migration
/ Hypotheses
/ Immigrants
/ Income estimates
/ Income level
/ Investments
/ Islands
/ LDCs
/ Migrant communities
/ Migrant remittances
/ Migrant workers
/ Migrants
/ Migration
/ Money
/ Motivation
/ Oceanic Cultural Groups
/ Pacific Islanders
/ Pacific Islands
/ Pacific Region
/ Parents
/ Polynesia
/ Population
/ Population Dynamics
/ Psychology
/ Recessions
/ Regression analysis
/ Remittances
/ Samoa
/ Samoans
/ Sampling Studies
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Standard of living
/ Studies
/ Sydney, Australia
/ Tonga
/ Tongans
/ Transients and Migrants
/ Trends
/ Western Samoans
1998
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Do you wish to request the book?
Do Migrants' Remittances Decline over Time? Evidence from Tongans and Western Samoans in Australia
by
Brown, Richard P C
in
Assets
/ Australia
/ Behavior
/ Cooperation
/ Data Collection
/ Demography
/ Developed Countries
/ Developing Countries
/ Disposable income
/ Economic aspects
/ Economic conditions
/ Economic migration
/ Economics
/ Emigration
/ Emigration and Immigration
/ Empirical research
/ Estimates
/ Exchange rates
/ Family Relations
/ Financial Management
/ Financial Support
/ Head of household
/ Homes
/ Host country
/ Human migration
/ Hypotheses
/ Immigrants
/ Income estimates
/ Income level
/ Investments
/ Islands
/ LDCs
/ Migrant communities
/ Migrant remittances
/ Migrant workers
/ Migrants
/ Migration
/ Money
/ Motivation
/ Oceanic Cultural Groups
/ Pacific Islanders
/ Pacific Islands
/ Pacific Region
/ Parents
/ Polynesia
/ Population
/ Population Dynamics
/ Psychology
/ Recessions
/ Regression analysis
/ Remittances
/ Samoa
/ Samoans
/ Sampling Studies
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Standard of living
/ Studies
/ Sydney, Australia
/ Tonga
/ Tongans
/ Transients and Migrants
/ Trends
/ Western Samoans
1998
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Do Migrants' Remittances Decline over Time? Evidence from Tongans and Western Samoans in Australia
Journal Article
Do Migrants' Remittances Decline over Time? Evidence from Tongans and Western Samoans in Australia
1998
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Overview
There is concern that Pacific Island economies dependent on remittances of migrants will endure foreign exchange shortages and falling living standards as remittance levels fall because of lower migration rates and the belief that migrants' willingness to remit declines over time. The empirical validity of the remittance-decay hypothesis has never been tested. From survey data on Tongan and Western Samoan migrants in Sydney, this paper estimates remittance functions using multivariate regression analysis. It is found that the remittance-decay hypothesis has no empirical validity, and migrants are motivated by factors other than altruistic family support, including asset accumulation and investment back home.
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