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Economic Implications of Remittances and Migration Dilip Ratha World Bank Global Issues Seminar Series October 11, 2006 Development implications of migration and remittances Migration and remittances continue to increase South-South migration may be as large as South-North migration Migration generates substantial welfare gains and reduces poverty. Benefits to countries of origin are mostly through remittances There is considerable scope for reducing remittance costs faced by poor migrants Development implications of migration and remittances Migration and remittances continue to increase South-South migration may be as large as South-North migration Migration generates substantial welfare gains and reduces poverty. Benefits to countries of origin are mostly through remittances There is considerable scope for reducing remittance costs faced by poor migrants International migration has increased Stock of migrants as share of destination countries’ population (%) 8.3 1970 2000 4.3 2.9 2.2 1.6 World Source: UN Industrial countries 1.8 Developing countries 1.6 1.3 Developing countries, excl. USSR Remittances are large, have continued to increase Private debt and portfolio equity 275 $ billion 225 175 125 75 FDI Recorded remittances ODA 25 19 90 19 91 19 92 19 93 19 94 19 95 19 96 19 97 19 98 19 99 20 00 20 01 20 02 20 0 20 3 04 20 e 05 e -25 Top recipients of remittances - 2004 $ billion 22 % of GDP 21 31 18 27 13 India China Mexico France 26 25 23 12 Philippines Tonga Moldova Lesotho Haiti BosniaHerz. Top sources of remittances, 2004 39 $ billion % of GDP 0.7 14 13 0.3 10 0.2 6 U.S.A. Saudi Arabia Switzerland Germany 0.3 Russia Low-income Lower middleincome Upper middleincome High income OECD Development implications of migration and remittances Migration and remittances continue to increase South-South migration may be as large as South-North migration Migration generates substantial welfare gains and reduces poverty. Benefits to countries of origin are mostly through remittances There is considerable scope for reducing remittance costs faced by poor migrants Migration to the South has been significant Number of migrants in millions 91 78 51 48 45 29 22 11 5 1965 1985 2005 South (Developing countries) Source: United Nations 1965 1985 2005 1965 1985 2005 North (High-Income North (High-Income OECD) excl. OECD) Global migrant stocks (millions) South Migrants in North North (HI OECD) (HI non-OECD) Total Migrants from: South 74 62 20 156 North 3 25 1.2 30 1 4 0.3 5 78 91 22 191 (HI OECD) North (HI non-OECD) Total Source: World Bank staff calculations based on migration data from University of Sussex, United Nations, and World Bank Destinations of migrants from the South North (HInon-OECD) 13% South 47% North (HIOECD) 40% Top migration corridors include several SouthSouth corridors (excluding the FSU) Mexico-US Bangladesh-India Turkey-Germany India-UAE Philippines-US Afghanistan-Iran Algeria-France India-Saudi Arabia Egypt-Saudi Arabia Pakistan-India India-US China-US Vietnam-US India-Bangladesh Malaysia-Singapore Burkina Faso-Cote Cuba-US 10.4 South-South South-North 0 1 Source: University of Sussex and World Bank 2 3 millions of migrants 4 Former Soviet Union corridors are among the largest South-South corridors Russia-Ukraine Ukraine-Russia KazakhstanRussia RussiaKazakhstan millions of migrants 0 1 2 3 4 5 South-South remittances were likely between $19 to $53 billion in 2005 Sources of Remittances to developing countries ($ billion, 2005) By migrant By migrant stocks By migrant stocks, stocks and host country host country incomes, incomes and sending country incomes South 53 19 32 North 128 162 149 Total 181 181 181 Source: World Bank Staff estimates Development implications of migration and remittances Migration and remittances continue to increase South-South migration may be as large as South-North migration Migration generates substantial welfare gains and reduces poverty. Benefits to countries of origin are mostly through remittances There is considerable scope for reducing remittance costs faced by poor migrants Remittances reduce poverty Evidence from a few household surveys shows that remittances reduce poverty Cross-country evidence shows that a 10% increase in per capita remittances leads to a 3.5% decline in the share of poor people Remittances also finance education and health expenditures, and ease credit constraints on small businesses Remittances tend to rise following crisis, natural disaster, or conflict Remittances as % of private consumption 2.0 2.0 2.0 1.7 1.8 1.4 1.2 year before year of crisis year after 1.0 0.5 Indonesia Mexico Thailand Remittances improve countries’ access to capital Present value of external debt as % of exports of goods, services, and remittances 800 700 600 Excluding remittances 500 Including remittances 400 300 200 100 al a te m G ua do r Sa lva Jo rd an El M or o cc o a ai c Ja m ne s ilip pi Ph Pa kis t an or ua d Ec Le ba no n 0 Downside Large remittance flows may lead to currency appreciation and adverse effects on exports Remittances may create dependency Remittance channels may be misused for money laundering and financing of terror Development implications of migration and remittances Migration and remittances continue to increase South-South migration may be as large as South-North migration Migration generates substantial welfare gains and reduces poverty. Benefits to countries of origin are mostly through remittances There is considerable scope for reducing remittance costs faced by poor migrants Remittance fees are high, and regressive Fee and foreign exchange commission as % of principal 16 9 7 6 $100 $200 $300 $400 5 5 $500 $600 Weighted average of fees of four largest money transfer operators in the U.S.-Mexico corridor South-South remittance costs tend to be higher than North-South costs Fee and FX commission $ London-Lagos $29 Cotonou-Lagos $35 South-South Singapore-Jakarta Kuala Lumpur-Jakarta $10 North-South $12 Jakarta-Kuala Lumpur Los Angeles-Mexico City Guatemala City-Mexico City Mexico City-Guatemala City $27 $13 $23 $24 Policy priorities Governments can provide information and regulate intermediaries to reduce risks, costs of migration High remittance costs faced by poor migrants can be reduced by increasing access to banking and strengthening competition in the remittance industry Governments should not tax remittances or direct the allocation of expenditures financed by remittances Policy priorities Governments can provide information and regulate intermediaries to reduce risks, costs of migration High remittance costs faced by poor migrants can be reduced by increasing access to banking and strengthening competition in the remittance industry Governments should not tax remittances or direct the allocation of expenditures financed by remittances Policy priorities Governments can provide information and regulate intermediaries to reduce risks, costs of migration High remittance costs faced by poor migrants can be reduced by increasing access to banking and strengthening competition in the remittance industry Governments should not tax remittances or direct the allocation of expenditures financed by remittances Future work Improving bilateral migration data Understanding impacts (on incomes, inequality, health, gender, and migrant rights) Better management of migration Reducing remittance costs Monitoring, analysis, projection - Size, corridors, channels - Counter-cyclicality - Effects on poverty, education, health, investment Financial access - Deposit and saving products - Loan products (mortgages, consumer loans, microfinance) - Credit history for MFI clients - Insurance products Capital market access - Private banks and corporates (securitization) - Governments (diaspora bonds) - Sovereign credit rating Retail payment systems - Remittance costs - Payment platforms/instruments - Regulation (clearing and settlement, capital adequacy, exchange controls, AML/CFT, disclosure, cross-border arbitration)