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International Forum on Remittances 2007 Washington D.C., 18-19 October 2007 Euro-Mediterranean remittances: Partnerships and Investments Pedro J. F. de Lima
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Remittances in Mediterranean Partner Countries (MPC) and EIB support Workers remittances to developing countries are private flows in excess of 200bn USD in 2006. Remittances play an important economic role in many of those countries: mostly consumption, but also investment. Can an institution like the EIB enhance the developmental impact of remittances? Typically, the EIB -- the financial arm of the EU -- operates in countries outside the EU financing investment projects that promote economic development strenghtening the private sector deepening the financial sector
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Remittances in Mediterranean Partner Countries (MPC) and EIB support EIB has long standing relationship with Mediterranean countries In Barcelona in 2002 the EIB received a new mandate (FEMIP) … increase in finance (EUR2 billion per year), technical assistance, policy dialogue. priority on private sector development
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… reinforced in 2004 with the introduction of a special FEMIP envelope to enhance private sector lending (extended risk-sharing operations) and the creation of a Trust Fund to support initiatives in priority sectors For the 2007-2013 period, FEMIP mandate renewed at EUR 8.7 billion by the European Council to finance private sector, regional integration and socio-economic infrastructures. Remittances in Mediterranean Partner Countries (MPC) and EIB support
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Considerable economic importance to MPCs: remittances larger than FDI and ODA combined
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Considerable economic importance to MPCs, but not uniformly across the region Remittances as % of GDP (2005), MPC countries
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Considerable economic importance to MPCs, but not uniformly across the region Remittances in dollars per head (2005), MPC countries 1600
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Not as stable as in other parts of the world: oil dependence and renewed migration flows Remittances in USD dollars (bn)
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...but little variation regarding use Use of remittances in Mediterranean countries follows a pattern similar to that of other areas Consumption is by far the largest item (50%) Health and education are another important use (18%) Housing investment has some significance (14%) Business investment appears to be relatively limited in most countries. Egypt and Tunisia appear exceptional (15 to 18%)
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Methodology
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Remittances in MPC: diversity of sources … In Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and Turkey, remittances from the EU account for 85-90% of total For Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria, Golf countries are the main source (EU accounting for 5- 10% of remittances)
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Improving the efficiency of workers ’ remittances in Mediterranean countries Market imperfections and information deficiencies Exclusivity contracts for MTOs in post offices Lack of transparency on transfer costs (particularly as regards exchange rate fees); Inadequate information regarding available transfer mechanisms and associated costs, speed and reliability; Accessibility to banking accounts for emigrants residing in the EU is also limited and banking products are not sufficiently tailored for remitters, with few exceptions. Inadequate payment systems and limited usage of bank accounts in Mediterranean countries. Imperfections result in high transactions costs, which can exceed 16 percent of capital sent.
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Costs and flows per migrant not too dissimilar across corridors … Spain- Morocco Germany- Turkey Germany- Lebanon France- Algeria Cost % 1-8.82.5-9.41.5-9.40.8-8.4 Total remittance $/migrant/year 3515185126882500
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… but large differences as regards use of banking sector Spain- Morocco Germany- Turkey Germany- Lebanon France- Algeria Main formal channel Banks/MTOBanksMainly MTO % Informal 3419750 Cost % 1-8.82.5-9.41.5-9.40.8-8.4 Total remittance $ /migrant/year 3515185126882500 Total remittance $/migrant/year through banks 5621037376150 Relatively efficient GER-TK channel, much less GER-LE or FR-AL
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The FEMIP-EIB contribution Promote efficiency and interconnection of payment systems Disseminate information, promote best practices Reduce transfer costs Channel remittances to formal sector; increase access to banking
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Information dissemination and promotion of best practices
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The FEMIP-EIB contribution Promote efficiency and interconnection of payment systems Disseminate information, promote best practices Reduce transfer costs Channel remittances to formal sector; increase access to banking
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The FEMIP-EIB contribution Banking and financial sectors strengthening Remittances contributing to improve funding of financial institutions Financial development leading to economic growth
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Securitization of remittances flows Remittances as collateral for the issuance of bonds/notes (future flow securitization): banks transfer the foreign currency flows to an SPV set-up in an offshore financial centre. $ € Bank: Hard currency $ local currency €
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Securitization of remittances flows Remittances as collateral for the issuance of bonds/notes (future flow securitization): banks transfer the foreign currency flows to an SPV set-up in an offshore financial centre. $ € Bank: Can extend Finance at lower Costs $ local currency SPV: issues notes, Proceeds to bank
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Securitization of remittances flows Risk to international investors gets reduced: Willingness to pay issues are settled Transfer and convertibility issues are tackled Particularly appealing for countries with sub-investment ratings In 2005, five SPVs issued more than 4 billion USD in Turkey securitized by diversified payment rights (SWIFT transfers MT-100, MT-102, MT-102+, MT-103, MT-103+…, corresponding to transactions such as cash-against-goods, cash-against-document transactions, letter of credit transactions, cheques, as well as workers’ remittances)
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EIB support to first remittance securitization operation in Lebanon EIB’s role: catalyst as well as provider of TA Lebanon: a good candidate. Stable remittances Economy with high T&C risk Sophisticated financial sector and favorable regulatory environment (securitization law) SPVs should deliver savings on funding commensurate with improved ratings
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First SPV operation: − EIB to buy notes, leading other (institutional) investors to participate − But also providing TA funds to support the setting up of the first SPV – a public good, easily replicable by subsequent SPVs EIB support to first remittance securitization operation in Lebanon
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