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Remittance flows and welfare implications: the Nigerian experience

Ikenna Paulinus Nwodo (Department of Economics, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria)
Ambrose Nnaemeka Omeje (Department of Economics, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria)
Chukwu Ugwu Okereke (Department of Economics, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria)

International Journal of Emerging Markets

ISSN: 1746-8809

Article publication date: 17 November 2023

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Abstract

Purpose

In Africa, recent data show that Nigeria is the second top remittance recipient behind Egypt, but welfare seems deteriorating. Most related reviewed literature is micro-based with surveys, giving credence to the dearth of macro-based literature whose gap this study attempted to fill. Thus, the main purpose of this study is to examine remittance flows and its welfare implications in Nigeria.

Design/methodology/approach

The study used quarterly data (1980Q1–2020Q4) from World Development Indicators (2020) and applied the dynamic ordinary least squares (DOLS) model.

Findings

Remittance flows were found to be significantly improving the welfare of Nigerians by about 0.04% for a percentage remittance increase. Financial sector development results show that while loans decrease welfare per individual significantly by 0.25% given a 1% increase in the loans accessible by the private sector, a percentage increase in broad money supply in circulation raises welfare per individual significantly by about 0.43%.

Practical implications

Since remittance is found to improve welfare, the study recommends that relevant stakeholders should endeavor to eliminate all form of bottlenecks (payment delays, remitting costs, transfer delays, poor policies and policy inconsistencies) inherent in remitting funds back to Nigeria. The implication of this is that if the impediments are minimized, remittances are bound to rise which will ultimately lead to improved welfare.

Originality/value

The existing literature revealed that there exists very limited or no macro-based study in this context, hence this novelty study.

Keywords

Citation

Nwodo, I.P., Omeje, A.N. and Okereke, C.U. (2023), "Remittance flows and welfare implications: the Nigerian experience", International Journal of Emerging Markets, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOEM-03-2022-0348

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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