Remittance
flows to the developing world are expected to exceed earlier estimates and
total $406 billion this year, an increase of 6.5 per cent over the previous
year, according to a new World Bank (WB) brief on global migration and remittances.
Remittances
to developing countries are projected to grow by 7.9 per cent in 2013, 10.1
per cent in 2014 and 10.7 per cent in 2015 to reach $534 billion in 2015.
Worldwide
remittances, including those to high-income countries, are expected to total
$534 billion in 2012, and projected to grow to $685 billion in 2015, according
to the latest issue of the Bank’s Migration and Development Brief, released
today.
However,
despite the growth in remittance flows overall to developing countries, the
continuing global economic crisis is dampening remittance flows to some
regions, with Europe and Central Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa especially
affected, while South Asia and the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are expected
to fare much better than previously estimated.
The
top recipients of officially recorded remittances for 2012 are India ($70
billion), China ($66 billion), the Philippines and Mexico ($24 billion each),
and Nigeria ($21 billion). Other large recipients include Egypt, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Vietnam, and Lebanon.
As
a percentage of GDP, the top recipients of remittances, in 2011, were
Tajikistan (47 per cent), Liberia (31 per cent), Kyrgyz Republic (29 per cent),
Lesotho (27 per cent), Moldova (23 per cent), Nepal (22 per cent), and Samoa (21
per cent).
“Although migrant workers are, to a large extent,
adversely affected by the slow growth in the global economy, remittance volumes
have remained remarkably resilient, providing a vital lifeline to not only poor
families but a steady and reliable source of foreign currency in many poor
remittances recipient countries,” said director of the Bank’s Development Prospects Group Hans
Timmer.
Regions
and countries with large numbers of migrants in oil exporting countries
continue to see robust growth in inward remittance flows, compared with those
whose migrant workers are largely concentrated in the advanced economies,
especially Western Europe.
Thus,
South Asia, MENA and East Asia and Pacific regions, with large numbers of
workers in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, are seeing
better-than-expected growth in remittances. For South Asia, remittances in 2012
are expected to total $109 billion, an increase of 12.5 percent over 2011; East
Asia and Pacific region, is estimated to attract $114 billion, an increase of
7.2 per cent over 2011; while MENA is expected to receive $47 billion, an
increase of 8.4 per cent over the previous year.
Remittances
to Latin America and the Caribbean are supported by a recovering economy and an
improving labor market in the US but moderated by a weak European
economy. The region will, thus, see a modest growth of 2.9 per cent in 2012,
totaling an estimated $64 billion.
In
contrast, remittances are expected to remain flat to Europe and Central Asia
and Sub-Saharan Africa regions, mainly because of the economic contractions in
high-income European countries. Remittance flows to Europe and Central Asia are
estimated at a virtually unchanged $41 billion and $31 billion to Sub-Saharan
Africa this year, although both regions are projected to make a robust recovery
in remittance flows in 2013.
“Migrant workers are displaying tremendous
resilience in the face of the continuing economic crisis in advanced
countries,” manager of the Bank’s Migration and Remittances Unit and lead author of the
Migration and Development Brief Dilip Ratha said, adding that their agility in finding alternate employment
and cutting down on personal expenses has prevented large scale return to their
home countries.
Going
forward, the Bank expects continued growth in remittance flows to all regions
of the world, although persistent unemployment in Europe and hardening
attitudes towards migrant workers in some places present serious downside
risks.
Another
obstacle to growth of remittance flows is the high cost of sending money, which
averaged 7.5 per cent in the third quarter of 2012 for the top 20 bilateral
remittance corridors and nine per cent for all countries for which cost data are
available. The average remittance cost for Sub-Saharan Africa was 12.4 per cent,
the highest amongst all developing regions.
The
Migration and Development Brief also notes that the promise of mobile
remittances has yet to be fulfilled, despite the skyrocketing use of mobile
telephones throughout the developing world. Mobile remittances fall in the
regulatory void between financial and telecom regulations, with many central
banks prohibiting non-bank entities to conduct financial services. Central
banks and telecommunication authorities, thus, need to come together to craft
rules relating to mobile remittances.
The
Brief also discusses the implementation of the new remittance regulations in
the US and Europe and concludes that these regulations are likely to
lower remittance costs in the long run by increasing competition and improving
consumer protection.
“The global community has made progress in three
out of four areas of the global remittances agenda – data, remittance costs,
and leveraging remittances for capital market access for countries. Progress,
however, has been slow in the area of linking remittances to financial access
for the poor. There is great potential for developing remittance-linked micro-saving
and micro-insurance schemes and for small and medium enterprise (SME)
financing,” said Ratha.
As
a key player in the migration and remittances arena, the World Bank is
working on a new initiative, the Global Knowledge Partnership on Migration and
Development (KNOMAD), which is aimed at facilitating multidisciplinary debate
and discussion on migration issues, developing policy options, and assisting
sending and receiving countries implement pilot policies.
The
Bank also continues to make considerable strides in developing financing
instruments for leveraging migration and remittances for national development
purposes. Diaspora bonds can be a powerful financial instrument for mobilizing
diaspora savings to finance specific public and private sector projects, as
well as to help improve the debt profile of the destination country.
The Bank has also set up a Diaspora Bond Task Force to provide technical assistance to countries interested in implementing diaspora bonds for financing development projects.
The Bank has also set up a Diaspora Bond Task Force to provide technical assistance to countries interested in implementing diaspora bonds for financing development projects.
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