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Remittances, Diasporas and Economic Development

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Title: Remittances, Diasporas and Economic Development


1
  • Remittances, Diasporas and Economic Development

2
The Multilateral Investment Fund
  • Promotes private sector development in Latin
    America and the Caribbean (LAC)
  • Funds small technical assistance and
    demonstration projects
  • Tests new ways to develop micro and small
    enterprise, improve the business environment and
    engage the private sector in the process of
    development
  • Is primarily a grant mechanism, but can also use
    a full range of instruments such as equity,
    quasi-equity and loans

3
Remittances and MIF Strategy
Four years ago the MIF of the IDB began to
commission studies, sponsor conferences, and
finance projects in order to help
1
2
3
Lower transaction costs by promoting competition,
and encouraging innovative technologies
Leverage the development impact of remittances,
through banking and productive investment
Document the increasing importance of remittances
to the Region
4
Remittances
  • Dramatic growth of remittances has attracted
    attention
  • Now subject of public discussion and policy
    considerations
  • Wide range of stakeholders financial
    institutions and money transfer companies, public
    authorities, civil societies, international
    organizations
  • But its about transnational families its
    their money a result of their hard work

5
Fueled by Global Economy
  • Remittances are the traditional financial
    support for families back in their home countries
  • This phenomenon is generated by movement of
    labor across borders

people move north by the MILLIONS
and money moves south by the BILLIONS.
6
Volumes are Huge
  • Foreign workers sent at least 174 billion to
    their countries of origin in 2004
  • 120 billion through official channels but
    unofficial channels account for significant
    volumes. World Savings Banks Institute estimates
    flows are 200 billion
  • Major implications for national economies but
    little really known - it has been hidden in plain
    view

7
Key Findings
  • Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) receives
    the most remittances
  • transfer costs are lowest when remittances are
    sent through regulated financial institutions,
    such as banks, credit cooperatives, and credit
    unions
  • the average cost of remitting to countries
    outside LAC is cheaper than remitting to LAC


8
LAC migrants ? North America
  • For the last two decades the preferred
    destination for the over-whelming majority of
    Latin American and Caribbean migrants has been
    North America principally the US
  • According to the 2000 U.S. census, approx. 5 or
    14.47 million people emigrated from LAC countries


9
Remittances are Growing
  • Latin America and the Caribbean is both the
    fastest growing and highest volume remittance
    market in the world
  • In 2004 over 45 billion of remittances flowed
    into the region
  • At current growth rates, the projected cumulative
    remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean
    for the decade (2001-2010) will approach
  • US 500 billion

10
Major Economic Impact
  • substantially exceed of Official Development
    Assistance (ODA) inflows to each country
  • account for over 10 of GDP in Haiti, Nicaragua,
    El Salvador, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, and
    Guyana
  • equal more than 150 of the interest paid on the
    total LAC external debt during the past five
    years

11

Integrating Labour Markets
Central America, the Caribbean, and Andean
countries all report consistent increases in
remittances, which reflect the growing
integration of labour markets between LAC and the
rest of the world
12
Mexico 13,266
Belize 73
Honduras 862
Cuba 1,194
Dominican Republic 2,217
Jamaica 1,425
Haiti 977
Nicaragua 788
Trinidad Tobago 88
Guatemala 2,106
Venezuela 247
Panama 220
Costa Rica 306
El Salvador 2,316
Guyana 137
Colombia 3,067
Ecuador 1,656
Brazil 5,200
Peru 1,295
Bolivia 340
Remittances by Selected LAC Countries 2003 (US
millions)
Uruguay 42
Argentina 225
13
Remittance Senders
  • A 2004 MIF study found that over 60 percent of
    adult, foreign-born Latino people living in the
    U.S. send remittances regularly and about another
    10 send remittances occasionally
  • Two-thirds of remittance senders dispatch money
    at least once a month, and the most recently
    arrived (those in the United States less than
    five years) are the most frequent remitters with
    three-quarters sending money at least once a
    month
  • Most send 200 to 300 at a time

14
Transfer Mechanisms From U.S.
  • 70 of senders use transfer companies such as
    Western Union or Money Gram

15
Cost of Transfer
  • Until recently the remittances market in LAC
    countries was only composed by only a small
    amount of major institutions and several small
    players
  • Before 2000, the average cost of sending
    remittances to LAC was about 15 of the value of
    the transaction
  • In an era of electronic transfer of resources,
    this suggested a lack of transparency / maturity
    / and competition in the remittance transfer
    market

16
Cost of Transfer
17
Costs are reducing
  • In recent years, the remittance industry has
    become more transparent and competitive
  • By February 2004, the average cost had nearly
    halved to reach 7.9 percent or 16 for sending
    200
  • This reduced average, when compared with fees
    five years ago, is mostly due to the fact that
    charges have decreased with greater competition
    and use of technology.

18
Costs Vary
  • Remitters to Mexico, El Salvador, and Guatemala
    charge lower fees than companies sending money to
    Jamaica and the Dominican Republic where
    competition is less robust or controlled
  • For other countries, like Cuba or Haiti, where
    market restrictions are even tighter, charges are
    generally the highest

19
Remittances and Development
  • First - Clear up misconceptions
  • Remittances are not
  • a substitute for International Development Aid
  • a substitute for Economic Development or Social
    Welfare Public Policies
  • a preferred development model for a nation
  • Growth in Remittances is no cause for celebration
  • Remittances are not a development model but
    rather a sign of the failure of development

20
Maximize the Positives
  • Key Goals
  • Maximize the contribution of the transnational
    family as an agent for economic and social
    development in the communities of origin
  • Maximize the economic, financial and social
    inclusion of the migrants and their families in
    their countries of origin and residence

21
Core Principles
In order to help organize and focus priorities
for this collective effort, in March 2004 MIF
issued a set of
Core Principles
promoting best practices within the LAC
remittance market.
22
Core Principles
Remittances Institutions
Public Authorities
These Core Principles are aimed at
Civil Society
23
Core Principles
IMPROVE TRANSPARENCY
DO NO HARM
PROMOTE FAIR COMPETITION AND PRICING
IMPROVE DATA
Core Principles
APPLY APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
ENCOURAGE FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
SEEK PARTNERSHIPS AND ALLIANCES
PROMOTE FINANCIAL LITERACY
EXPAND FINANCIAL SERVICES
LEVERAGE DEVELOPMENT IMPACT
SUPPORT SOCIAL AND FINANCIAL INCLUSION
24
Core Principles
DO NO HARM
IMPROVE DATA
Governments
ENCOURAGE FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
PROMOTE FINANCIAL LITERACY
25
Core Principles
IMPROVE TRANSPARENCY
PROMOTE FAIR COMPETITION AND PRICING
Remittance Institutions
APPLY APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
SEEK PARTNERSHIPS AND ALLIANCES
EXPAND FINANCIAL SERVICES
26
Core Principles
Civil Society
LEVERAGE DEVELOPMENT IMPACT
SUPPORT SOCIAL AND FINANCIAL INCLUSION
27
World Bank/BIS
  • Have convened an international group of Central
    Banks, international and other development
    organizations to develop General Principles for
    International Remittances
  • Will create service standards and principles for
    consumer protection, transparency and market
    behavior

28
European Union
  • Has developed new approach to regulating
    remittance transfers
  • This creates a category of payment institutions
    to whom would be issued a single EU passport to
    operate in the internal market - therefore
    increasing competition
  • Also regulates information to be provided with
    credit transfers

29
MIF Strategy
Working with a network of participating
stakeholders to help reach two goals by 2010
Goals
Increase to 50 the number of families receiving
remittances through the financial system.
Reduce by 50 the average cost of LAC remittance
market transactions by promoting increased
competition
30
Key Objectives
  • Promote financial inclusion
  • In LAC, less than 10 of remittance recipients
    have bank accounts, access to loans or other
    financial products
  • Develop opportunities to invest in local economic
    development
  • Increase competition to lower transaction costs
  • Improve regulatory and institutional frameworks

31
Areas of growing focus
  • Technology - opening new possibilities to lower
    costs and offer a wider range of financial
    services
  • Housing - mobilize savings and turn earnings into
    equity
  • Securitize remittance flows to create new source
    of lower cost and longer term capital
  • Research impact of gender - women make up half of
    remittance senders worldwide and most heads of
    remittance-receiving households

32
Looking Ahead
  • All stakeholders can help - financial
    institutions and money transfer companies, public
    authorities, civil society and diaspora groups,
    international organizations
  • However one central principle should be in mind
  • Its their money
  • Successful efforts will result in transnational
    families with more money available for their own
    purposes, and more options in using those
    resources

33
Inter-American Development Bank
  • 1300 New York Av. NW
  • Washington D.C. 20577
  • (1) 202 942-8211
  • www.iadb.org/mif
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