Remittances and the Growth of the Nigerian Economy

Authors

  • Margaret Abiola Loto Associate professor, Department of Economics, University of Lagos
  • Ajibola Akinyemi Alao Department of Economics, Accounting and Finance, Bells University of Technology, Ota

Keywords:

Remittances, Migrants’ remittance, Workers’ remittance, economic growth.

Abstract

The study investigated the contributions of foreign remittances on economic growth in
Nigeria from 1980 to 2016, using the Vector error correction modelling (VECM)
technique to analyze the long run and short run impact of disaggregated remittances
that is Migrants ’Remittances and Workers’ Remittances to find out whether they will
perform differently in relation to economic growth in Nigeria. The two components of
remittances performed differently. While the Migrants remittance component exhibits a
long run positive, statistically significant relationship with economic growth, the other
component i.e Workers Remittance has a negative statistically significant impact in the
long run, short run relationship was also established among the variables as the ECM
term was negative and statistically significant. The results showed a unidirectional
causality from GDP per capita to Migrants remittances while no causality was found
between workers’ remittances and gross domestic product per capita. The study
therefore recommends the need to strategically harness the contribution of workers’
remittances by ensuring that the money is spent on locally produced goods instead of
imported goods so as to ensure a positive relationship with economic growth in
Nigeria. The study hereby concludes that remittance is a major driver of economic
growth in Nigeria.

Published

2023-01-17

Issue

Section

Articles