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The trees and the forest Mapping development finance towards developing countries Javier Santiso Chief Development Economist & Deputy Director OECD Development Centre Development Finance Architecture P a r i s 3 J u l y 2 0 0 6 1 1 Mapping the flows to developing countries 2 The trees and the forest (a) The relative importance of aid flows (b) Emerging economies vs developing countries (c) Are official and private flows complementary? 3 A new development finance architecture? 2 Financial flows to developing countries in USD million Net Private flows to developing countries Total net flows to developing countries 800,000 800,000 700,000 700,000 600,000 600,000 500,000 500,000 400,000 400,000 300,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 100,000 100,000 24% 9% 13% 9% 0 0 1980 1990 1995 2000 Asia Eastern Europe 2004 1980 1990 1995 2000 2004 Latin America Africa X% Africa’s share of developing countries inflows 3 Source: OECD DAC, IIF, UNCTAD, World Bank 2006 Capital Inflows in developing countries, 2004 2 85 39 19.4 CIS and South Europe 180 72.3 68 29.3 Developing Asia 0.5 34 -10 28 24 Africa and Middle East 62 41 7 Latin America Net FDI and portfolio Investment Remittances ODA Disbursements Private creditors Source: IIF, OECD DAC, UNCTAD, World Bank 2006 Recipient Country Donour country 4 Focus: Capital inflows in Africa 100,000 90,000 80,000 70,000 41% 60,000 50,000 40,000 0.5 37 28 24 24 0.5 30,000 65% 49% 37% 20,000 10,000 77% 0 -10,000 1980 1990 1995 2000 2004 $ bn; 2004 FDI and portfolio Investment Remittances X% ODA Disbursements Private creditors Share of ODA in Africa’s total inflows 5 Source: World Bank, UNCTAD, IIF, OECD 2006 1 Mapping the flows to developing countries 2 The trees and the forest (a) The relative importance of aid flows (b) Emerging economies vs developing countries? (c) Are official and private flows complementary? 3 A new development finance architecture? 6 Private flows to developing countries increased at a record pace in 2005 $ billions Percent Percent of GDP (right axis) 500 6 $491 billion in 2005 450 500 450 5 400 350 4 300 400 350 300 250 3 200 Portfolio FDI 250 200 2 150 100 1 50 150 100 50 0 0 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 Bonds Bank 0 Total net private flow s 2005 2005 Source World Bank GDF 2006 7 Development Finance according to the US: US Total flows going to developing countries according to two sources, 2003 US Private capital flows 7% US Universities / Foreign Student Scholarships 2% US Based Religious Organizations 7% US NGOs Grants abroad 3% Personal remittances 25% Personal remittances 44% US Government Other Country assistance 1% US ODA 19% US Government Other Country assistance 2% US Foundations Giving abroad 4% US ODA 14% US Corporate Foundations Giving abroad 1% US Foundations Giving abroad 2% US Private capital flows 45% US Universities / Foreign Student Scholarships 2% US NGOs Grants US Corporate abroad Foundations 11% US Based Giving abroad Religious 6% Organizations 5% Total 112 $bn Total 84 $bn Source: USAID 2006 Sources: OECD Development Centre, Hudson Institute 2003 8 1 Developing countries external financing 2 The trees and the forest (a) The relative importance of aid flows (b) Emerging economies vs developing countries (c) Are official and private flows complementary? 3 A new development finance architecture? 9 Financial resources of emerging economies in 2004 2004 1980 250,000 250,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 150,000 100,000 100,000 50,000 50,000 0 0 Private creditors Equity investment ODA Disbursements Remittances -50,000 Private creditors Developing countries (excl emerging) Equity investment ODA Remittances Disbursements Emerging Economies 10 Source: UNCTAD, World Bank GEP 2006, IIF online statistics, OECD DAC 2006 Are emerging economies really emerging? BRICS’ Share of all foreign investment stocks a century ago and now 26% 6% 74% 1913 BRIC + Mexico Rest of the world 94% 2003 11 Source: OECD Development Centre, based on figuers from Schularick, M. A tale of two globalizations, 2006 1 Developing countries external financing 2 The trees and the forest (a) The relative importance of aid flows (b) Emerging economies vs developing countries (c) Are official and private flows complementary? 3 A new development finance architecture? 12 Aid progressive distribution vs private flows regressive distribution Concentration Curve 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 .2 .4 .6 Population Ranked by GDP per cap. 2000-03 .8 Tot. ODA/OA 2000-01 nets FDI 2000-01 Natives living in OECD v. 2000 Exports to OECD 2000-01 GDP Per cap. 2000 Line 45 deg. Source: Lambert, S et Cogneau D; L’aide au développement et les autres flux nord sud: Complémentarité ou substitution? Centre de Développement de l’OCDE, janvier 2006 1 13 1 Mapping the flows to developing countries 2 The trees and the forest (a) The relative importance of aid flows (b) Emerging markets vs developing countries? (c) Are official and private flows complementary? 3 A new development finance architecture? 14 New Flows, New Actors Private flows increasingly constitute a main source of development finance Consequently, new flows and actors have to be integrated into the development process We lack of a clear mapping of both those flows and actors involved in development finance Another issue is that apart for remittances, private flows are directed towards emerging economies The policy response thus varies depending on the type of country 15 Policy Options Low Income Countries Emerging Economies Aid is still very much needed to bridge financing needs of developing countries Main challenge for developing countries: continue the process of alignment and aid harmonisation to increase aid effectiveness Promote other private flows to increase their significance in developing countries Other sources of development finance are strongest in emerging economies The development finance architecture needs to incorporate these new sources Major coordination / interaction needed between ODA actors and Non-ODA actors of development finance 16 Policy Issues The issue is not only DAC Donors coordination or DAC Donors versus Emerging Donors coordination As new actors and new flows are becoming increasingly relevant for developing economies the issue is also about better coordination and synergies between – Official donors and private actors – Private actors between themselves (i.e. public private equity funds; sri investors; corporate foundations; etc.) Country based strategy or issue based strategy? The example of Health Sector in Ghana. 17 Annex I: Two eras of financial integration: Are emerging economies financial integration higher than before? Share of international investment stocks in 1913 and 2000 Share of world GDP (in ppp, 1990 international dollars) 30 25 25 20 20 15 15 na Ch i In di So a ut h Af ric a Br az il M ex ico Fr an ce Ja pa n Ru ss ia Ar ge nt in a an y G er m US Ch in a a Af ric In di a So ut h o M ex ic Br az il Ar ge nt in a Ru ss ia er m UK G Ja pa n 0 Fr an ce 0 an y 5 US 5 UK 10 10 Integration Index 16 Country’s share in world Invesment stocks Integration Index = Country’s share in World GDP 14 12 10 8 6 4 1913 2000 2 na Ch i ca Af ri So ut h In di a Br az il M ex ico Fr an ce Ja pa n Ru ss ia Ar ge nt in a an y G er m UK US 0 Source: Maddison (1995, 2001) ; Schularick, M. A tale of two globalizations 2006. 18 Annex I: Are emerging economies really emerging? BRICS’ Share of all foreign investment stocks a century ago and now 26% 6% 74% 1913 BRIC + Mexico Rest of the world 94% 2003 19 Source: OECD Development Centre, based on figuers from Schularick, M. A tale of two globalizations, 2006 Annex II: How many economies are emerging according to Wall Street? Emerging countries (29) 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 an E SB C H Le hm ga n M or FT S St an le y I SC M II F tS re di C JP M ui or ss e ga n ns te r ar S EM BI Be C it ig ro up Other developing countries (124) International Institute of Finance: 29 countries. (chosen sample) OECD Development Centre, based on selected major financial organisations Emrging Markets analysis reports 2006 20 Annex II: Who are the emerging economies according to Wall Street? Presence frequency in banks Analysis (n=38) 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% Note: Countries most frequently analysed in selected Emerging Markets Analysis. (Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, HSBC, Lehman Brothers, Bear Sterns, Credit Suisse, FTSE, JP Morgan, IIF) The percentage represents the average presence in their analysis. Only countries analyzed by more than 30% of them appear on the graph. Source: OECD Development Centre, calculation according to selected analysis reports 21 Tunisia Israel Pakistan Romania Vietnam Taiwan Dominican Rep Nigeria Morocco Serbia Ukraine India Czech Republic African Emerging Countries Bulgaria Panama Uruguay Thailand Egypt Indonesia Ecuador South Korea South Africa Turkey China Venezuela Hungary Malaysia China Chile Brazil Russia Philippines Poland Philippines Peru Mexico Colombia Argentina 0% Annex II: Where are the emerging economies in 2005 according to Wall Street? 16% 36% Latin America CIS and East Europe Asia 24% Africa and Middle East 24% 22 Source: OECD Development Centre, calculation based on major investment banks analysis, 2006 Annex III: Remittances flows are particularly strong towards low-income countries… Billions of Dollars Nigeria Share of GDP 2.8 10 Yemen, Rep. United States 3 Kiribati Colombia 3.2 Vietnam 3.2 Portugal 3.2 Egypt, Arab Rep. 3.3 Bangladesh 3.4 Brazil 3.6 Pakistan 3.9 Serbia 4.1 Morocco 4.2 6.4 Germany 6.5 Belgium 6.8 Spain 6.9 Albania 11.7 Nicaragua 11.9 Tajikistan 12.1 Samoa 12.4 Lebanon 12.4 Dominican Rep. 13.2 Philippines 13.5 15.5 16.2 EI Salvador Serbia and Montenegro 17.2 Jamaica 17.4 20.4 Jordan Philippines 11.6 France Bosnia and Herzegovina 12.7 18.1 China India 25.8 Moldova 21.7 15 24.8 Lesotho 21.3 10 22.5 Haiti Mexico 5 11.7 Honduras United Kingdom 0 11.3 Nepal 20 27.1 Tonga 25 31.1 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Source: Based on OECD and The World Bank (2006) 23 The central issue for developing countries: Transaction costs … but not in all countries Remittances costs in Mexico Remittances costs in Latin America * (%, for 200 USD) (%, 200 USD) 10.6 * From USA; 2004 Source: PEW Hispanic Center 24 Average Ecuador Peru El Salvador Colombia 7.9 7.3 7.3 7.3 6.9 6.4 5.8 5.6 5.4 Nicaragua Bolivia Venezuela 2004 Haiti 7.3 Jamaica 7.4 Cuba Rep. Dominicana Source: Pew Hispanic Center 2002 2001 2000 8.1 2003 9.2 Guatemala 8.9 8.6 8.2 Honduras 11.3 México 12.1 13.0 The central issue for all developing countries: How to capitalize remittances’ bonanza? Uses of remittances in Mexico in 2004 % of total 78.0 7.0 5.0 Consummer Education Savings Goods 4.0 Others 1.0 1.0 Investment Households Source: Fomin y Pew Hispanic Center 25 Annex III: Credit worthiness and higher access to capital can be reached through remittances… Debt as % of Exports (2004) . Indebtedness Classification according to Remittances 500 Ratio Debt/Ex ports -3.9% Ratio Debt/(Ex ports + Remittances) -9.3% 400 -5.5% 300 -17 .2% -24.5% 200 -3.4% -3.5% -7 .6% 100 0 Argentina Peru Brazil Colom bia Ecuador Chile Venezuela Mex ico Source: OECD Development Centre, 2006. Based on: “Economic Implications of Remittances and Migration”. World Bank, 2006. 26 …which could have a positive effect on sovereign credit ratings Potential Improvements in Credit Rating through Remittances Determinants of Sovereign Credit Ratings Explanatory Variable Constant Dependent Variable Rating Moody's Rating S&P 3.408 -0.524 (1.38) (-0.22) A AA GDP per capita 1.027 (4.04) 1.458 (6.05) AA GDP growth rate 0.130 (1.54) 0.171 (2.13) A+ -0.630 (-2.70) -0.591 (-2.67) 0.049 (0.82) 0.097 (1.71) 0.006 (0.54) 0.001 (0.05) External debt / Exports -0.015 (-5.36) -0.011 (-4.24) Developed country (dummy) 2.957 (4.18) 2.595 (3.86) CC C+ Default since 1970 (dummy) -1.463 (-2.10) -2.622 (-3.96) CCC - 49 0.905 1.325 49 0.926 1.257 Fiscal balance / GDP Current account balance / GDP No. observations Adjusted R2 Standard error A+ Potential S&P with Remittances A ARating (S&P) Inflation rate S&P Rating (May 2006) BBB+ BBB B BB BB+ BB + BB BB+ BB BB+ BB BB BB- BB - B+ B B BCCC+ C Chile Mexico Brazil Colombia Peru Venezuela Argentina Ecuador Note: T-statistics are in parentheses. Parameters estimates that are significant at the 5% are indicated in bold. Source: OECD Development Centre, 2006. Based on: Rowland, P. “Determinants of Spread, Credit Ratings and Creditworthiness for Emerging Market Sovereign Debt: A Follow-Up Study Using Pooled Data Analysis”. Banco de la Republica de Colombia, 2005. 27