Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?

<p>Studies on migration in Nepal primarily focused on the causes of migration, in general. While a few studies examined the remittances received or sent by migrants, there is little information about the variation in remittances received by households by migrant’s destination. Thus, this explo...

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Main Author: Prem Bhandari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tribhuvan University 2016-10-01
Series:Dhaulagiri Journal of Sociology and Anthropology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nepjol.info/index.php/DSAJ/article/view/15879
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spelling doaj-3d691ac3953a44559872d0252574e0732020-11-25T03:29:11ZengTribhuvan UniversityDhaulagiri Journal of Sociology and Anthropology1994-26641994-26722016-10-0110013610.3126/dsaj.v10i0.1587912306Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?Prem Bhandari0Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan<p>Studies on migration in Nepal primarily focused on the causes of migration, in general. While a few studies examined the remittances received or sent by migrants, there is little information about the variation in remittances received by households by migrant’s destination. Thus, this exploratory study attempts to answer: Does the extent to which households receive remittances vary by migrant’s destination? Using the data collected in 2013 from the western Chitwan Valley of Nepal, the findings from multivariate analysis reveal that net of controls, both the receipt (whether a household received any remittance or not) as well as the amount of remittances received by a household varied by migrant’s destination. Evidence suggests that households are less likely to receive remittances from migrants working in India (a country of low earning potential) as compared to those working in Nepal. On the other hand, households received significantly more amount of remittances from migrants working in countries with high earning potentials (such as Middle East, East or South East Asia, and America, Australia and Europe) as compared to the domestic migrants who were working inside of Nepal but outside of Chitwan. Adjusting for other factors, the largest amount of remittances was received from migrants working in the East or South East Asian countries (e.g. South Korea, Malaysia, Japan) followed by those in America, Australia, and Europe and the Middle East. The insights gained from this exploratory study are discussed<em>.</em></p>http://nepjol.info/index.php/DSAJ/article/view/15879destination, migration, Nepal, remittance, South Asia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Prem Bhandari
spellingShingle Prem Bhandari
Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?
Dhaulagiri Journal of Sociology and Anthropology
destination, migration, Nepal, remittance, South Asia
author_facet Prem Bhandari
author_sort Prem Bhandari
title Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?
title_short Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?
title_full Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?
title_fullStr Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?
title_full_unstemmed Remittance Received by Households of Western Chitwan Valley, Nepal: Does Migrant’s Destination Make a Difference?
title_sort remittance received by households of western chitwan valley, nepal: does migrant’s destination make a difference?
publisher Tribhuvan University
series Dhaulagiri Journal of Sociology and Anthropology
issn 1994-2664
1994-2672
publishDate 2016-10-01
description <p>Studies on migration in Nepal primarily focused on the causes of migration, in general. While a few studies examined the remittances received or sent by migrants, there is little information about the variation in remittances received by households by migrant’s destination. Thus, this exploratory study attempts to answer: Does the extent to which households receive remittances vary by migrant’s destination? Using the data collected in 2013 from the western Chitwan Valley of Nepal, the findings from multivariate analysis reveal that net of controls, both the receipt (whether a household received any remittance or not) as well as the amount of remittances received by a household varied by migrant’s destination. Evidence suggests that households are less likely to receive remittances from migrants working in India (a country of low earning potential) as compared to those working in Nepal. On the other hand, households received significantly more amount of remittances from migrants working in countries with high earning potentials (such as Middle East, East or South East Asia, and America, Australia and Europe) as compared to the domestic migrants who were working inside of Nepal but outside of Chitwan. Adjusting for other factors, the largest amount of remittances was received from migrants working in the East or South East Asian countries (e.g. South Korea, Malaysia, Japan) followed by those in America, Australia, and Europe and the Middle East. The insights gained from this exploratory study are discussed<em>.</em></p>
topic destination, migration, Nepal, remittance, South Asia
url http://nepjol.info/index.php/DSAJ/article/view/15879
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