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Arbeitspapier

Foreign Assistance and Emigration: Accounting for the Role of Non-Transferred Aid

Autoren

  • Lanati
  • M.
  • Thiele
  • R.

Erscheinungsdatum

JEL Classification

F22 F35 O15

Schlagworte

Auswanderung

Entwicklungshilfe und Migration

Mehr zum Thema

Migration

Schwellen-& Entwicklungsländer

Since policymakers increasingly regard foreign aid as a means to manage international flows of migrants, it is important to obtain accurate empirical evidence on the complex link between aid and migration. Recent research has shown that the impact of foreign assistance on migrant flows is highly heterogenous across aid categories. In this paper, we focus on a dimension of heterogeneity that has so far not been considered in the literature, namely whether or not the delivery of foreign aid is associated with a transfer of resources to the recipient country. We show in a first step that non-transferred aid is quantitatively important, accounting for more than 25 percent of overall aid given by OECD DAC donors in 2016. Running separate gravity-type regressions for transferred and non-transferred aid, we then find that transferred aid has a much stronger (negative) impact on migration than the previously used total aid variable that includes the non-transferred component. As may be expected, non-transferred aid itself does not appear to affect migrant flows. A high share of non-transferred aid would therefore be at odds with donors’ stated goal of tackling the root causes of migration.

Kiel Institut Expertinnen und Experten

  • Prof. Dr. Rainer Thiele
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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