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OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ECONOMIST & VICE PRESIDENT, ECON Development Research Department African Development Bank Group Leveraging Migration for Africa: Remittances,

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Presentation on theme: "OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ECONOMIST & VICE PRESIDENT, ECON Development Research Department African Development Bank Group Leveraging Migration for Africa: Remittances,"— Presentation transcript:

1 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ECONOMIST & VICE PRESIDENT, ECON Development Research Department African Development Bank Group Leveraging Migration for Africa: Remittances, Skills, and Investments Launch of the Report at the African Development Bank April 11, 2011

2 Africa Migration Project: An Overview Joint African Development Bank and World Bank Multi-donor trust fund  Donors: CIDA, DFID, France Ministry of Immigration and Integration, AFD, IFAD, SIDA, Danish MFA Emphasis on collaboration with local researchers in Africa

3 Africa migration report 1 Migration patterns and policies in Africa 2 Migrant Remittances in Africa 3 Migration of the highly skilled in Africa 4 Harnessing Diaspora resources Chapters

4 Publication: March –April 2011 1.Flagship Report on Migration, Remittances and Development in Africa 2.Edited volume: Remittances Markets in Africa 3.Edited volume: Diaspora and Development 4.Household survey data from 6 countries, catalogue and guidance notes 5.Report of Global Survey of Central Banks on Remittances (already published)

5 Key messages Migration comes in all its complexity in Africa, but it is predominantly intra-regional Migration reduces poverty Remittances are large – much larger than currently measured – in Africa. They proved to be resilient during the recent crisis. Migration of skilled people can generate complex effects, but in the end, labor market solutions have to be found – supply of skill has to be augmented to meet global and local demand

6 Key messages (contd …) Diaspora can be a significant source of wealth and ideas for development. Capacity for managing migration is weak in Africa and needs to be strengthened. However, in general, migration should not be viewed as a substitute for development at home. Rather it is an integral – and beneficial - aspect of globalization.

7 Mapping Migration in Africa

8 South-South migration is larger than migration from developing countries to high-income OECD countries Source: Leveraging migration for Africa: remittances, skills and investments 2011 Destination of migrants from the South

9 In Sub-Saharan Africa migration is predominantly intra- regional Source: Leveraging migration for Africa: remittances, skills and investments 2011 Destination of migrants from SSA

10 Key results: patterns (contd..) South-South migration is a feature of migration pattern in Africa

11 Emigration from North Africa is mostly to the OECD countries Destination of migrants from North Africa Source: Leveraging migration for Africa: remittances, skills and investments 2011

12 Africa’s migration rate appears to be lower than the world average; but Africa has data gaps

13 High Skilled Migration from and within Africa

14 Skilled migration rates are highest among smaller countries

15 Migration: policy challenges & options What should we do? Treat the symptom or cure the disease? Take away Passports? Punish the recruiters? Pay higher salaries back at home? Make migrants pay for their education? Make migrants feel guilty?

16 Migration: policy challenges & options …or is high level of skilled migration a result of wrong education, healthcare, labor market policies?

17 Migration: policy challenges & options Cost of education of professionals is easily outweighed by remittances Supply of skill has to be matched to global and local demand – Through labor markets, not quotas Promising policy interventions: foreign hospitals open training centers in Africa; improve working conditions; increase R&D spending

18 Mobilizing Diaspora Resources

19 African Diaspora For the Report African Diaspora is classified into:  skilled and unskilled  Located inside and outside Africa  Data for population born in country i and living in country j (from census data)

20 Diaspora contributions Provide information about international trade opportunities; match making; referral services Diaspora can be an important source of:  Research and innovation  Technology transfer  Skills development  Capital  Philanthropy  Collective remittances

21 Diaspora Investment Diaspora resources are determined by the net wealth of members. Types  Diaspora bonds (India, Israel, Ethiopia, Zimbabwe)  Diaspora funds (Liberia is considering it) Several countries show that diasporas do invest (e.g., China, Ethiopia, India, Israel, Ireland)

22 Policies to maximize the benefits of the Diaspora Dual/Multiple citizenship/Voting rights Conducive business environment/trade/technology/invest Measures to quantify their Diaspora Develop financial instruments to tap to the Diaspora Portability of pension funds Embassies abroad should be encouraged & equipped (staff and resources) to provide services to their Diaspora

23 Remittances in Africa

24 Remittances are a large and stable source of finance for Africa ($ billion, 2008) Recorded remittances41.1 ODA39.4 FDI55.7 Private debt & portfolio equity-10.9

25 Remittances proved to be resilient during recent crisis Remittance flows to North Africa approx. $18 billion and Sub-Saharan Africa $21 billion in 2009 Flows to Africa fell by 12% in North Africa and only 3.6% in Sub-Saharan Africa Risks to the outlook include delayed economic recovery, currency movements, and rising protectionism

26 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ECONOMIST & VICE PRESIDENT, ECON Development Research Department African Development Bank Group Improving the developmental impacts of Remittances: the issues

27 High transfer costs in Africa create incentives to use informal channels Source: Leveraging migration for Africa: remittances, skills and investments 2011

28 High cost and limited access to banks are top factors inhibiting use of formal channels Source: Leveraging migration for Africa: remittances, skills and investments 2011

29 Facilitating remittances Cost of remittances should be reduced especially in South-South corridors Exclusive partnerships are being eliminated in some African countries, but de facto arrangements continue in practice Post offices and mobile phone companies can play a significant role Mobile phone remittances show promise; but regulations continue to pose obstacle to using these technologies in cross-border remittances

30 Remittances are now being factored into debt sustainability analysis of low-income countries External Debt as a percent of exports, 2008

31 Potential for securitization of remittances and other future-receivables in Africa Potential: $17 billion in Sub-Saharan Africa alone from future flows of mineral exports, tourism receipts and remittances Constraints to remittance securitization in Africa  Lack of sovereign ratings in many African countries  Paucity of highly rated banks and firms  High fixed costs (legal, investment banking fees)

32 Diaspora Bonds: promising innovative source of development finance Migrants more loyal than average investors in times of distress might be interested in financing infrastructure, housing, health and education projects. Diaspora bonds would offer higher interest rate than the rate Diaspora savers earn from bank deposits where they reside. Preliminary estimates suggest Sub-Saharan African countries can potentially raise $5-10 billion per year by issuing Diaspora bonds.

33 Potential for Diaspora bonds Sub-Saharan Africa Country Diaspora size (thousands) Potential savings ($ billions, 2007) South Africa7132.9 Nigeria8372.8 Ghana9071.7 Kenya4271.7 Ethiopia4461.6 Somalia4411.6 Senegal4631.3 Zimbabwe7611.0 Sudan5871.0 Angola5231.0

34 Summary Migration comes in all its complexity in Africa, but it is predominantly intra-regional. Remittances provide a lifeline to the poor in Africa; these flows can be leveraged for financial access of both households and countries. Supply of skill has to be matched to global and local demand through labor markets, not quotas.

35 Summary Diaspora can be a significant source of wealth and ideas. Financing for development can be raised via Diaspora bonds. Embassies need to be strengthened and encouraged to mobilize Diaspora resources. Capacity for managing migration needs to be strengthened. Migration should not be viewed as a substitute for development at home. But migration is an integral – and beneficial - aspect of globalization.

36 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ECONOMIST & VICE PRESIDENT, ECON Development Research Department African Development Bank Group Report available online at http://www.afdb.org/en/news-and- events/article/african-migration-generates-win-win- benefits-says-new-report-7878/. http://www.afdb.org/en/news-and- events/article/african-migration-generates-win-win- benefits-says-new-report-7878/ www.afdb.org www.afdb.org/aec www.africaneconomicoutlook.org


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