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REMITTANCES: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE AND GROWTH STORY FOR ARMENIA Tigran Kostanyan, Economist, World Bank September 10-11, Cholpon-Ata, Kyrgyz Republic
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Snapshot of the literature There is a number of studies on potential effects of remittances, but they are of uncertain magnitude and conflicting direction; Representing 30% of total financial flows, the remittances are supposed to have pro-poor effects: according to Adams and Page (2005) 10% increase in remittances leads to 3.5% decline in poverty level; Mishra (2007) and Bouton et al. (2009) found that 10% decrease in labor due to migration leads 3.2-4% increase in wages; In El Salvador remittance increase student retention rates, while in Mexico the effect is opposite…
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East Asia and Pacific| Stylized Facts Remittances to East Asia grew at an average annual rate of 15.8% vs. 7.8% for the developing world as a whole (1989-2009); East Asia represents its own migration hub (Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and Korea); Most migrants in East Asia are unskilled (e.g. 67% of the migrants from Indonesia and 70% of the migrants from Vietnam have less than a secondary school education) High level of irregular and undocumented migration Females dominate migration flows in East Asia
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East Asia and Pacific| Macroeconomic effects in labor-sending countries Increase in consumption and reduction in poverty rates Higher investment in education Source for the CAD financing However, No sustainable linkages were revealed between remittances and long-term economic growth / investment and savings rates And Remittance flows lead to appreciation of the real exchange rate of labor-sending countries eroding the competitiveness
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East Asia and Pacific| Poverty Impact of Remittances CountryEffects of remittances Philippines 10pp increase in international remittances leads to a 2.8pp decrease in the poverty headcount Fiji Poverty headcount decreased by 7% (or 2.7pp) Tonga Poverty headcount decreased by 43% (or 24.7 pp) Ghana For remittances-receiving households, the level of poverty falls by 88.1% with the inclusion of remittances LAC 1 percentage point increase in the remittance to GDP ratio reduces poverty headcount by about 0.4% Cross- country Household surveys in 71 developing countries show that a 10% increase in per capita international remittances in a country is associated with a 3.5% decline in the US $1 a day poverty rate
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Global Context: The Facts to Consider the Importance of Remittances for Armenia The share of remittances in GDP was 15.9% in Armenia (2011), while globally it was only 0.5%. The net inflows of remittances are disproportionate to the relative size of the Armenian economy: while amounting only 0.015% of the world’s GDP, it attracts 0.4% of total remittances.
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Remittances and Production Function Remittances can affect economic growth through ALL the channels of production function Capital Accumulation Labor Force Total Factor Productivity
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Capital Accumulation Supplement to the domestic sources of income for investments Lower the cost of capital Improve the creditworthiness of investors Augment household collateral
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Capital accumulation| Supplement for investments Being the major “consumer” of investments, the construction growth depicts the trends of remittances and stipulates the real GDP growth. On average the inflows of remittances were equivalent to 60% of total investments over 2001-2011.
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Accumulation| Impact on Economy There is an evidence of correlation between remittances and construction growth
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Construction Pass-Through The construction contributed more than ⅓ to the economic growth over 2002-2008. It was also leading the economic contraction in 2009.
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Implications of construction-driven growth It expanded by 5.5 times in real terms and contributed more than 1/3 to the real GDP growth over 2002-2008; Number of employed people in this sector and its share in total employment increased by around 67%; The salary, which is among the highest in the economy, contributed to labor income growth and thus alleviated poverty pressures.
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Capital Accumulation| Financial Markets Only a few banks consider the remittances as proof of income The remittances are secondary source of income Long history of sustained remittances inflows is needed
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Labor Force| Quantitative and Qualitative Aspects May REDUCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION through migration and moral hazard channels. May IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF LABOR FORCE since they reduce the need of youngsters to work. According to the study conducted by the ILO (2007) around 9% of remittances in Armenia are used for human capital development.
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Use of Remittances| ILO Study
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Total Factor Productivity| Real effective exchange rate Remittances inflows may be associated with the REER appreciation implying a potential for Dutch disease effects
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Total Factor Productivity| Dutch disease implications Before the crisis non-tradable branches led the growth. Crisis collapse was also explained by them.
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Total Factor Productivity| Business environment Being a substitute for domestic income, remittances may undermine good governance, due to weaker pressures for reforms.
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Remittances| Quick wins vs. sustainable growth Real GDP growth remains sluggish despite recovery of remittances
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Useful facts and sources
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