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dc.contributor.authorGibson, John
dc.contributor.authorOlivia, Susan
dc.contributor.authorRozelle, Scott
dc.date.accessioned2008-12-15T01:42:43Z
dc.date.available2008-12-15T01:42:43Z
dc.date.issued2006-03
dc.identifier.citationGibson, J., Olivia, S. & Rozelle, S. (2006). How widespread are non-linear crowding out effects? The response of private transfers to income in four developing countries. (Department of Economics Working Paper Series, Number 1/06). Hamilton, New Zealand: University of Waikato.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10289/1640
dc.description.abstractThis paper investigates whether there is a non-linear relationship between income and the private transfers received by households in developing countries. If private transfers are unresponsive to household income, expansion of public social security and other transfer programs is unlikely to crowd out private transfers, contrary to concerns first raised by Barro and Becker. There is little existing evidence for crowding out effects in the literature, but this may be because they have been obscured by methods that ignore non-linearities. If donors switch from altruistic motivations to exchange motivations as recipient income increases, a sharp non-linear relationship between private transfers and income may result. In fact, threshold regression techniques find such non-linearity in the Philippines and after accounting for these there is evidence of serious crowding out, with 30 to 80 percent of private transfers potentially displaced for low-income households [Cox, Hansen and Jimenez 2004, 'How Responsiveare Private Transfers to Income?' Journal of Public Economics]. To see if these non-linear effects occur more widely, semiparametric and threshold regression methods are used to model private transfers in four developing countries - China, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and Vietnam. The results of our paper suggest that non-linear crowding-out effects are not important features of transfer behaviour in these countries. The transfer derivatives under a variety of assumptions only range between 0 and -0.08. If our results are valid, expansions of public social security to cover the poorest households need not be stymied by offsetting private responses.en_US
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesDepartment of Economics Working Paper Series
dc.subjectcrowding outen_US
dc.subjectprivate transfersen_US
dc.subjectsocial securityen_US
dc.titleHow widespread are non-linear crowding out effects? The response of private transfers to income in four developing countriesen_US
dc.typeWorking Paperen_US
uow.relation.series1/06


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