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Randall Akee and Devesh Kapur
01/24/2012
Abstract:
Utilizing a novel data set on remittance data for India that matches household surveys to
administrative bank data, we investigate the differences in self-reported and actual deposits to
Non-Resident Indian (NRI) accounts. There is a striking difference between the perceived and
actual frequency, as well as the amount of deposits, to NRI accounts. Our results indicate the
presence of non-classical measurement error in the reporting of remittances in the form of deposits
to NRI accounts. As a consequence, regression analyses using remittances as an explanatory
variable may contain large upward biases instead of the usual attenuation of results under classical
measurement error. Instrumental variables estimates are no better; the estimated coefficients from
these regressions are more than three times the size of the OLS regression results.
The results point
to the need to more carefully check the accuracy of the international remittance flows. The wide
discrepancies in the Indian case could be both because of inaccuracies in the household survey as
well as mis-classification of the Balance of Payment data with some fraction of reported remittances
being disguised capital flows (and hence likely to be less stable) rather than current account flows for
family maintenance.
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