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Remittances and MFIs: Issues and Lessons from Latin America

Manuel Orozco and Eve Hamilton
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Manuel Orozco: InterAmerican Dialogue
Eve Hamilton: Chemonics International

A chapter in New Partnerships for Innovation in Microfinance, 2009, pp 123-139 from Springer

Abstract: Remittance flows to Latin American and the Caribbean reached $45 billion in 2004. For countries such as El Salvador, Nicaragua, Jamaica and others, remittances represent 10 percent or more of GDP and are one of the most important sources of foreign currency (IAD 2004). At the household level, remittances are a critical source of income for families living in poverty. Poor households receiving remittances have significant purchasing power relative to peer households that do not receive them (Orozco 2004). However, recipient households have limited access to financial institutions that provide financial services such as secure remittance delivery, safe interest-earning savings instruments, and loans. The recent entry of microfinance institutions (MFIs) into the remittance market has increasingly been advocated as a mechanism for leveraging remittance flows in ways that would achieve development goals. Donors have begun to provide technical assistance to help MFIs develop linkages with formal money transfer organisations (MTOs) and have enthusiastically supported such partnerships. Donors’ underlying assumption is that, due to their close proximity to recipient communities and experience in serving low-income households, MFIs are in a unique position to reach recipients with low-cost transfer services and other financial products. Moreover, by providing these services — often through partnerships with MTOs — MFIs can expand their operations and increase their revenues.

Keywords: Financial Service; Credit Union; Voice Over Internet Protocol; Transfer Cost; Microfinance Institution (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-540-76641-4_8

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-76641-4_8

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