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Cross border remittances and financial access issues: topics to understand the market base of MSBs. Manuel Orozco October 25th, 2007; Chicago FDIC Committee on Economic Inclusion. A. The context: migrants, development, and financial access.
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Cross border remittances and financial access issues: topics to understand the market base of MSBs Manuel Orozco October 25th, 2007; Chicago FDIC Committee on Economic Inclusion
A. The context: migrants, development, and financial access • One key trend in the global context is increasing labor market integration and transnational economic activities resulting from such integration • For one, the increased competitive capacity of the U.S. economy depends of an adequate demand for foreign labor to increase the country’s productivity; • Our demographic composition will experience faster aging without immigration; • Moreover the current transnational context has strengthened ties while already changing U.S. demographic composition; • Market supply and access to wealth among migrants is a critical factor to enhance development and competitiveness in our economy; • Efforts to expand access remain shy and highlight the need for greater intervention among government, private sector and grass roots civil society. • Efforts that work include grassroots marketing, alternative banking products, IT innovation and partnerships. • Alternative products such as cards are still a work in progress. . .
The relationship between a declining unemployment rate among Hispanics in the U.S. and the increase of remittances to Mexico is an indicator of the increasigng demand for foreign labor in the U.S. Source: Orozco, Manuel data compiled by the author
Transnational ties: Remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean, 2001-2006
The profile—migrant remitters Source: Orozco, Manuel and Jacob, Katy. “Remittances, prepaid cards,
Length of time in the US and average remitted Source: Orozco, Manuel. Transnational Engagement, Remittances and their Relationship to Development in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington, DC: ISIM
Gender and average remitted Source: Orozco, Manuel. Transnational Engagement, Remittances and their Relationship to Development in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington, DC: ISIM
US citizen and average remittance sent Source: Orozco, Manuel. Transnational Engagement, Remittances and their Relationship to Development in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington, DC: ISIM
B. Issues on the marketplace of money transfers • Players in the market: type, size, • Pricing: operating costs and consumer costs; • Market structure and concentration; • Regulatory environment; • Financial intermediation: demand and supply side dynamics; • Technology innovation
Changes in the demand side . . . Account to account transfers to Mexico: 1.00% (2004); 2.55% (2006); 7.28% (2007) Informal networks declined from 20%+ in 2000 to about 10%.
Nigerian migrants preference to change to a more efficient way and current cost of sending as % of principal sent
- Remittances and cost in Latin America and the Caribbean Source: Orozco, Manuel, International Flows... (2006)
C. Issues on financial access . . . • Usability: capable of opening accounts affordably and with small balances • Openness: capable of reaching everyone without underserving any social sector; • Formality: capable of enforcing regulations without compromising use and openness; • Functional capacity: capable to serve the four core product needs: (payments, savings, credit and risk mitigation); • Migrants are in a space where they often lack financial access, and where it exists, the access is not linked to formal depository institutions
Most migrants use businesses that offer none or few financial services . . .
. . . Partly because they have few financial obligations and no banking access. . .
. . . Migrants are not a monolithic group that either has no financial access and no obligations or has both….
They also believe that the most important reason to have a bank account is to save money . . .
Their access to bank accounts is determined partly by . . . • Demand for financial services • Number of financial obligations • Age • Gender • Citizenship, and not income (as is almost a constant) • Moreover, their interest to switch to account to account transfers is associated to changes among banks
Moreover, those owning accounts are more likely to send more money . . .
Recommendations • Accelerating financial access • Targeted goals and standards to increase access to financial services and access (who would be benefited) • Develop methodologies to accelerate banking rates • Increase a critical mass of the policy network • Underserved vs. marginality • Partnerships between MTOs and depository institutions in the U.S. and LAC: Dinero a Mexico, Red de la Gente, and others… • Make clear the compatibility between financial access and mitigating methods that reduce security risks of transactions • Segment and target appropriate markets • Lower the barriers to entry • Develop effective distribution channels • Educate the target market • Consider mobile banking channels
Consolidation and maturation Source: Orozco, Manuel. “Markets and Financial Democracy” (2005)