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Journal Article

Can Parental Migration Reduce Petty Corruption in Education?

Authors

  • Höckel
  • L.S.
  • Heidland
  • T.
  • Silva
  • M.S.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

D13 F22 H52 I22

Key Words

Auswanderung

children left behind

corruption

education spending

emigration

migration

social remittances

Related Topics

Migration

Educational outcomes of children are highly dependent on household and school-level inputs. In poor countries, remittances from migrants can provide additional funds for the education of the left behind. At the same time the absence of migrant parents can affect families' time allocation towards education. Previous work on education inputs often implicitly assumed that preferences for different kinds of education inputs remain unchanged when household members migrate. Using survey data from Moldova, one of the countries with the highest emigration rates in the world, and an instrumental variable approach we find that the strongest migration-related response in private education expenditure are substantially lower informal payments to public school teachers. This fact is at odds with a positive income effect due to migration. We argue that our results are likely to be driven by changing preferences towards educational inputs induced by migration.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Tobias Heidland
    Research Director

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Research Center

  • International Development