Unlocking the Potential for Labor Productivity Growth
Similarly, Irnazarov (2015) points out that a majority of remittances are spent
on “unproductive” items. Expenditures on traditional rites (e.g., weddings and
funerals) are the third highest category (of seven) for remittance expenditure,
after food and housing. Other categories include clothing, education, health, and
debt repayment. Furthermore, that the majority of remittances are transmitted
via money transfer operators implies that the remittances are more likely to
be spent quickly than money sent through the banking sector, which is more
likely to be retained in the form of deposits and therefore possesses a greater
potential for economic development by funding investment (Kakhkharov and
Akimov 2014).
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Receiving countries, such as the Russian Federation, benefit from the skills of
migrant workers, and their willingness to perform jobs that are often refused
by locals but are important for economic growth. For example, the Russian
Federation’s construction industry grew largely due to the use of cheap labor
from abroad (Ryazantsev 2016).
Migrant workers usually have higher levels of cognitive and noncognitive skills
than nonmigrants, and high-skilled workers are in general four times more
likely to migrate abroad than low-skilled ones (Kerr et al. 2016). Although skill-
biased migration increases global welfare, an excessive “brain drain” poses
a threat to the migrants’ home country (Biavaschi et al. 2016). For example,
monitoring of the Asian Development Bank’s water and sanitation projects in
Uzbekistan suggests that in some project areas, insufficient working-age males
are available to take part in community planning and priority setting (ADB
2014). On the positive side, returning migrant workers are more capable of
contributing to their home country’s labor force after gaining experience and
enhancing their skills in foreign countries (Ajwad et al. 2014). Rahmatullaevich
(2012) finds that 2 in 10 migrants claim that they gained a new skill while
working abroad.
3.6. Policy recommendations
The government is pursuing new ideas and principles to sustain the country’s
development through its Action Strategy for Five Priority Areas of the
Republic of Uzbekistan 2017–2021 (Government of Uzbekistan 2017a).
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In 2016, Uzbekistan received $2.48 billion in remittances, of which $1.89 billion (or 76% of total remittances)
was sent from the Russian Federation alone through money transfer operators (World Bank. World
Development Indicators. http://datatopics.worldbank.org/world-development-indicators/ [accessed 7
August 2019] and Central Bank of Russia. Cross-Border Transfers of Individuals. https://www.cbr.ru/eng/
statistics/macro_itm/svs/ [accessed 8 August 2019]).
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