David Ereng Keino1* and Nicholas Kariuki2
This paper investigates the effect of remittances on gross domestic savings in Uganda using maximum likelihood framework. The results show that remittances have a significant negative effect on gross domestic savings. This contradicts the studies that show positive relationship between remittances and gross domestic savings but in agreement that remittances are mainly devoted to daily consumption needs and that foreign capital inflows have a negative and significant impact on domestic savings. The study also showed that other factors such as real effective exchange rate, per capita gross domestic product, and inflation rate and deposit interest rate affect remittances positively. It is therefore recommended, that government should establish agencies in countries to where most Ugandans migrate in order to capture their savings and help them channel those savings into productive projects in Uganda
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