the social, economic and political impact of remittances october 2009

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THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

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Page 1: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND

POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES

THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND

POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES

October 2009October 2009

Page 2: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

“Beyond Small Change” IDB

“Beyond Small Change” IDB

Worldwide $300B in ‘06 by 150M migrants (WB $309, $380 & $433B in 06, 07 & 08).

$68B to LAC ‘06. For some countries, more than sum FDI/ODA. Must add “goods”.

More than $60B sent by LAC migrants living in USA (more than 60% of total living in USA send remittances). Rest mostly from Spain. 7% decrease expected in ‘09.

They send 12% of their salary ($200-300) almost thirteen times every year.

Worldwide $300B in ‘06 by 150M migrants (WB $309, $380 & $433B in 06, 07 & 08).

$68B to LAC ‘06. For some countries, more than sum FDI/ODA. Must add “goods”.

More than $60B sent by LAC migrants living in USA (more than 60% of total living in USA send remittances). Rest mostly from Spain. 7% decrease expected in ‘09.

They send 12% of their salary ($200-300) almost thirteen times every year.

Page 3: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Widespread originWidespread origin

Remittances come from nearly every State.CA $13.2B, TX $5.2B, NY $3.6B,, FL $3.1B, IL

$2.6B, NJ $1.9B, GA $1.7B, AZ $1.4B, NC $1.2BM, VA $1.1BM.

MD $921M, CO $646M, NV $618M, MA $579M, PA $517M , WA $504M.

TN $407M, IN $386M, OR $383M, NM $370M, MI $337M, WI $335M, SC $322M, CT $301M, MN $292M, UT $258M, AR $253M, OK $226M, AL $219M, KS $215M, OH $214M.

All the rest, save MT & WV, also participated.

Remittances come from nearly every State.CA $13.2B, TX $5.2B, NY $3.6B,, FL $3.1B, IL

$2.6B, NJ $1.9B, GA $1.7B, AZ $1.4B, NC $1.2BM, VA $1.1BM.

MD $921M, CO $646M, NV $618M, MA $579M, PA $517M , WA $504M.

TN $407M, IN $386M, OR $383M, NM $370M, MI $337M, WI $335M, SC $322M, CT $301M, MN $292M, UT $258M, AR $253M, OK $226M, AL $219M, KS $215M, OH $214M.

All the rest, save MT & WV, also participated.

Page 4: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Widespread destinationWidespread destination

They go to nearly every country (2006).

MEX $24.3B, BRA $7.4B, COL $4.5B, GTM $3.6B, SLV $3.3B, EC $3.2B, DR $2.7B, PER $2.9B, HND $2.3B, JAM $1.9B, ARG $1.7B, CHL $1B, HAI $1B.

BOL $972M, VEN $950M, NIC $800M, PAR $650M, PAN $479M, URU $479M, CRI $444M, GUY $270M.

They go to nearly every country (2006).

MEX $24.3B, BRA $7.4B, COL $4.5B, GTM $3.6B, SLV $3.3B, EC $3.2B, DR $2.7B, PER $2.9B, HND $2.3B, JAM $1.9B, ARG $1.7B, CHL $1B, HAI $1B.

BOL $972M, VEN $950M, NIC $800M, PAR $650M, PAN $479M, URU $479M, CRI $444M, GUY $270M.

Page 5: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Putting it in PerspectivePutting it in Perspective

Remittances as % of GDP (2006):BR CO DR ES GU HA HO ME NI0.3 3.3 9 18 10 21 25 3 15Remittances as % of exports (2004):BR CO DR ES GU HA HO ME NI5 18 25 58 61 167 42 8 67

Remittances as % of GDP (2006):BR CO DR ES GU HA HO ME NI0.3 3.3 9 18 10 21 25 3 15Remittances as % of exports (2004):BR CO DR ES GU HA HO ME NI5 18 25 58 61 167 42 8 67

Page 6: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

The Importance of Remittances

The Importance of Remittances

Page 7: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Causes of MigrationCauses of Migration

Internecine conflicts (SLV, NIC, GTM).Natural disasters (Mitch, earthquakes).Economic hardship in home country.Employment opportunities in host

country (3Ds, jobs that are dirty, difficult, dangerous)

Migrants respond to comparative advantages. Rational “insurance” policy.

Internecine conflicts (SLV, NIC, GTM).Natural disasters (Mitch, earthquakes).Economic hardship in home country.Employment opportunities in host

country (3Ds, jobs that are dirty, difficult, dangerous)

Migrants respond to comparative advantages. Rational “insurance” policy.

Page 8: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Why do people remit?Why do people remit?

Altruistic reasons.Exchange reasons: remitter needs family

members for tasks at home & pays for them; family seeks insurance (diversify income) & finances family member’s trip; so that family can hire services that the remitter provided before; to reserve place in family or obtain larger inheritance.

In practice, difficult to distinguish between two reasons.

Altruistic reasons.Exchange reasons: remitter needs family

members for tasks at home & pays for them; family seeks insurance (diversify income) & finances family member’s trip; so that family can hire services that the remitter provided before; to reserve place in family or obtain larger inheritance.

In practice, difficult to distinguish between two reasons.

Page 9: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Compensatory or Opportunistic?

Compensatory or Opportunistic?

Evidence suggests that they are sent to compensate for situations at home. They are thus counter-cyclical. They reduce amounts sent when a devaluation occurs in home country and increase them in bad times.

Occasionally they are opportunistic (as capital flows), that is, sent to take advantage of an opportunity at home (investment opportunity, such as higher interest rate in the host country).

Evidence suggests that they are sent to compensate for situations at home. They are thus counter-cyclical. They reduce amounts sent when a devaluation occurs in home country and increase them in bad times.

Occasionally they are opportunistic (as capital flows), that is, sent to take advantage of an opportunity at home (investment opportunity, such as higher interest rate in the host country).

Page 10: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Uses of RemittancesUses of Remittances

Significant portion, often the majority, for consumption (60 to 80% in LAC).

Smaller portion to investment, usually land &/or housing.

HTAs used to promote investment in MEX (3x1) and SLV (2x1). Not very successful. Distrust of government.

Significant portion, often the majority, for consumption (60 to 80% in LAC).

Smaller portion to investment, usually land &/or housing.

HTAs used to promote investment in MEX (3x1) and SLV (2x1). Not very successful. Distrust of government.

Page 11: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Social ConsequencesSocial Consequences

A very dangerous journey.Brain, brawn and entrepreneurial drain.Family separation and breakdown.Disruption of labor markets.The dependency syndrome.Youth gangs.Backlash in host countries. Impact on remitters (poverty, schooling).

A very dangerous journey.Brain, brawn and entrepreneurial drain.Family separation and breakdown.Disruption of labor markets.The dependency syndrome.Youth gangs.Backlash in host countries. Impact on remitters (poverty, schooling).

Page 12: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Positive Economic Consequences

Positive Economic Consequences

Contribute to poverty alleviation, but not related to GDP growth rate. Not economic growth program.

Increase demand (local purchases, tourism, transportation, telecoms, nostalgic trade.)

Support education, housing and business development.

Reduce exchange rate volatility, country risk. Increase foreign exchange reserves (finance

needed imports) & debt sustainability. Constant (low volatility), long lasting (more than

ten years). Countercyclical. Negatively correlated with FDI & other private flows.

Contribute to poverty alleviation, but not related to GDP growth rate. Not economic growth program.

Increase demand (local purchases, tourism, transportation, telecoms, nostalgic trade.)

Support education, housing and business development.

Reduce exchange rate volatility, country risk. Increase foreign exchange reserves (finance

needed imports) & debt sustainability. Constant (low volatility), long lasting (more than

ten years). Countercyclical. Negatively correlated with FDI & other private flows.

Page 13: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Negative Economic Consequences

Negative Economic Consequences

“Dutch disease”: loss of X competitiveness.Higher interest rates in LC. De facto

dollarization.Weaken government’s will to maintain fiscal

discipline (they may consume/borrow more).Governments overspend hoping for growing

flows.Reduce labor force (migration & willingness to

work).Little correlation between GDP growth &

volume of remittances. Idem for inflation.

“Dutch disease”: loss of X competitiveness.Higher interest rates in LC. De facto

dollarization.Weaken government’s will to maintain fiscal

discipline (they may consume/borrow more).Governments overspend hoping for growing

flows.Reduce labor force (migration & willingness to

work).Little correlation between GDP growth &

volume of remittances. Idem for inflation.

Page 14: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Political ConsequencesPolitical Consequences

Several countries have unilaterally granted dual citizenship (Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua).

Others (Mexico, Honduras) have allowed their migrants to vote in their elections (restricted to Presidential candidates).

Scant participation (0.5% for Mexico and Honduras).

Several countries have unilaterally granted dual citizenship (Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua).

Others (Mexico, Honduras) have allowed their migrants to vote in their elections (restricted to Presidential candidates).

Scant participation (0.5% for Mexico and Honduras).

Page 15: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

Other (More Important) Political ConsequencesOther (More Important) Political Consequences

Manipulation of the fear of deportation.Influencing home politics thru relatives.Influencing home politics thru fear of

loss of remittances.Influencing host country politics.Is politics for migrants also “local”?Will politics be affected through culture

change?

Manipulation of the fear of deportation.Influencing home politics thru relatives.Influencing home politics thru fear of

loss of remittances.Influencing host country politics.Is politics for migrants also “local”?Will politics be affected through culture

change?

Page 16: THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL IMPACT OF REMITTANCES October 2009

MigrationMigration

Throughout time, people have migrated

Migration will continue and with it come remittances.

Close to a billion persons benefit from migration and remittances.

Thank you!

Throughout time, people have migrated

Migration will continue and with it come remittances.

Close to a billion persons benefit from migration and remittances.

Thank you!