Remittances and Other Financial Flows to Developing Countries
In: International migration, Volume 40, Issue 5, p. 181-211
ISSN: 0020-7985
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In: International migration, Volume 40, Issue 5, p. 181-211
ISSN: 0020-7985
In: International migration: quarterly review, Volume 40, Issue 5, p. 181-211
ISSN: 1468-2435
Official estimates of migrants' remittances are around US$100 billion annually, with some 60 per cent going to developing countries. Any policy making use of migrants as a development resource must understand the size and allocation of remittances, and the roles played by migrants and their communities in the remittance process. This paper examines the flows of remittances in relation to other financial flows to developing countries. The examination is based on data available from official statistics. As discussed in the paper, remittances by unofficial channels are significant by all accounts so the remittance amounts reported here are quite conservative.The paper shows that annual remittances to developing countries have more than doubled between 1988 and 1999. Viewed over the last decade, remittances have been a much larger source of income for developing countries than official development assistance (ODA). The gap is increasing, since ODA has been falling while remittances have increased. Furthermore, remittances appear to be a much more stable source of income than private flows, both direct and portfolio, which tend to be more volatile and flow into a limited set of countries.Remittances to developing countries go first and foremost to lower middleincome and low–income countries. Lower middle–income countries receive the largest amounts, but remittances constitute a much higher share of total international flows to low–income countries. Of the ten countries receiving most remittances, two are low–income (India and Pakistan); six are lower middle–income (Philippines, Turkey, Egypt, Morocco, Thailand, and Jordan); and two are upper middle–income (Mexico and Brazil).Sub–Saharan Africa received some 8 per cent of remittances in 1980, but only some 4 per cent in 1999. South Asia's share also declined from what was already a relatively high 34 to 24 per cent. Those who gained most were Eastern Europe and Central Asia, South and Central America, and the Caribbean, which increased their share of global remittances.
In: CDR Working Papers, 02.11
World Affairs Online
In: IBR-D-24-00133
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World Affairs Online
In: International journal of emerging markets v. 5, no. 3/4
The contributions in this e-book engage with recent trends and drivers of outward foreign direct investment from emerging economies and motives, structures and strategies of their multinational firms. Based on studies of firms and industries as well as aggregate investment trends, especially for the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China) the contributions engage with different aspects of home and host country determinants and outcomes of the more and more intense activities of EMNCs
In: K. Sauvant, P. Mallampally, G. McAllister, eds., New York: Vale Columbia Center on Sustainable International Investment, 2013
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