Description:
Macro- and micro-economic evidence
suggests a positive role of remittances in preparing
households against natural disasters and in coping with the
loss afterwards. Analysis of cross-country macroeconomic
data shows that remittances increase in the aftermath of
natural disasters in countries that have a larger number of
migrants abroad. Analysis of household survey data in
Bangladesh shows that per capita consumption was higher in
remittance-receiving households than in others after the
1998 flood. Ethiopian households that receive international
remittances seem to rely more on cash reserves and less on
selling household assets or livestock to cope with drought.
In Burkina Faso and Ghana, international
remittance-receiving households, especially those receiving
remittances from high-income developed countries, tend to
have housing built of concrete rather than mud and greater
access to communication equipment, suggesting that they are
better prepared against natural disasters.