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1 Putting Money in Motion: Costs of Migrant Remittances Microfinance India Summit November 16 th, 2010 Centre for Micro Finance, IFMR Justin Oliver, Executive Director
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India has 100 Million Domestic Migrants – who depend on transfers Transferring money over long distances is an essential financial activity Few migrants can do this formally People use several means: –Banks –Postal Money Orders –Couriers: Hawala and Cash carriers –Carrying oneself or sending with a friend
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Our Study Methodology 274 migrants and their families along 4 routes –Bihar – Hoskote –Tamil Nadu – Mumbai –Orissa – Surat –West Bengal – Delhi Purposive sampling to ensure wide range of respondents
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Migrants want transfers to be as secure and fast as possible – cost is not primary concern
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Many migrants would prefer to transfer through banks, but must be constrained from doing so Prefer Use Prefer
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Bank transfers are cheap, postal money orders cost twice as much, hawala couriers 50% more Indirect costs Formal fees Indirect costs Formal fees 3.0% 6.0% 4.6% 3.4% 0.3%
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But currently, banks are much less convenient than other means Receiver’s Time Sender’s Time Average Time for Transfer
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How can we make transfers easier? Rough Estimate: If all transfers cost 3%, Indian migrants would save roughly 1000 crore annually Bank transfers more accessible – government transfers, target migrant origins Increase access to banks –Branches, ATM’s & debit cards –Easier for banks to promote BC model and mobile transfers –More institutions able to process payments quickly and safely (MFI’s, Post offices, other?)
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9 Thank you For any questions: justin.oliver@ifmr.ac.in Our website: www.ifmr.ac.in/cmf
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