Press Room
 

FROM THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS

June 2, 2004
JS-1707

United States to Co-Organize APE
Remittance Symposium
Shaping the Remittances Market by Shifting to Formal Systems

TOKYO, JAPAN – As part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Finance Ministers’ process, the Working Group on Alternative Remittance Systems (ARS) – which is co-chaired by the United States, Singapore, Thailand and Japan – will be holding a symposium entitled "Shaping the Remittances Market by Shifting to Formal Systems". The symposium is being held at the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo, Japan on June 3-4, 2004. This event is co-sponsored by the Japanese Ministry of Finance, the Word Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

This unique symposium will bring together governments, the private sector and other key stakeholders to discuss opportunities and innovations in the cross-border remittance industry and share experiences from all over the world on successful ways to strengthen remittance channels and create market incentives for customers to shift from informal to formal financial systems. Participants include a wide array of policymakers, academics, private banks and money transfer businesses, and NGOs and microfinance institutions from countries such as the U.S., Mexico, the Philippines, Japan, India, Egypt, Malaysia, and Singapore.

The sessions will focus on ways to balance regulations and market incentives in the formal financial sector, explore the need to expand access to financial services in sending and receiving countries and consider how innovative technology can be used to establish new products to generate competition among formal service providers. The symposium will also seek ways to maximize the development impact of remittances in receiving countries and how governments, private sector and civil society can work together in this process.

While over $90 billion in recorded remittances were sent last year globally, unrecorded remittances through the informal financial systems can be significant as well(1). Alternative or informal remittance systems can provide critical financial services to migrant worker populations that are disenfranchised from mainstream financial institutions. These systems, furthermore, operate in environments where formal financial systems are underdeveloped or non-existent. Experience suggests that by strengthening formal financial systems and encouraging remitters to shift towards using formal channels through market incentives, senders and receivers of remittances both will be better served by accessing formal financial services. These provide additional mainstream financial services, and allow for additional safe mechanisms to send money. By understanding the impediment to using the formal financial systems, policymakers and the private sector can work to overcome these impediments and seek to encourage wider access to and use of financial services.

The APEC Alternative Remittance System (ARS) Initiative was launched in September 2002 by the APEC ARS Working Group – co-chaired by Japan, Singapore, Thailand and the United States - to examine the economic and regulatory factors for using informal remittance services through technical research with the support of the World Bank.(2) This research forms the basis for this symposium and brings together key stakeholders to seek ways to create the right market conditions to allow remittances to be sent through formal channels.

For further information or interviews please contact:

Christopher Hawkins in Pucón, Chile, on +56 9418 9204 (Chile Cellular), +65 9179 4590 (Singapore Cellular) or email: ch@apec.org

(1) World Bank, Global Development Finance 2004; "Appendix A: Enhancing the Developmental Effect of Workers’ Remittances to Developing Countries". (2) World Bank. Informal Funds Transfer Systems in the APEC Region: Initial Findings and a Framework for Further Analysis. Sept. 2003