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Remittances often pass through currency exchanges. |

New energy pipeline, Georgia. |
The EBRD’s initiative for its seven poorest countries of operations, launched
18 months ago, has flourished thanks to dramatic increases in donor funding
matched by a huge increase in EBRD loans and equity investment in those
countries.
“When we launched this initiative, there was a lot of scepticism within and
without the EBRD as to whether it would work,” said Olivier Descamps, EBRD’s
Business Group Director responsible for the Early Transition Countries (ETC
Initiative) .
“It has become a Bank-wide initiative – we’ve really managed to pull it off,”
he said at a meeting on Feb. 24 of donors backing the initiative focusing on
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan.
Donor funding for ‘technical cooperation’ projects has more than doubled from
€8 million in 2003 to €18 million in 2005, with another €3 million committed
in the first two months of 2006. These grants fund expert analysis and advice
to the benefit of companies and governments in the EBRD region.
By improving the prospects for investment, donor funds leverage even greater
amounts of EBRD financing, which in the ETCs almost tripled from €53 million
in 2003 to €250 million in 2005. Of that, €100 million was for a road project
in Azerbaijan; the rest of the projects were of an average size of €2.5
million.
“In 2003 we did just 18 operations in these countries; in 2005 we did 61
investments,” said Mr Descamps. “We are delivering, as promised, a wider range
of investment products tailored to these countries, an increased level of
smaller deals, and we are taking more risk. The Bank is having a broader and
bigger impact!”
ETCs get attention
“The ETC region is now the largest group receiving donor assistance,” said
Gary Bond, director of the EBRD office managing donor funding. One much-lauded
innovation under the initiative is the creation of the ETC Fund. By pooling
donor funds, it makes it easier to match donor funds with needy projects,
getting many into shape so that they qualify for EBRD loans or equity
investment.
To date, €32 million has been pledged to the fund and, as of Friday’s meeting,
€19.5 million committed to projects. At the rate things are progressing, the
fund will run dry by 2007 unless it is replenished. At last week’s meeting,
donors pledged another €5 million to the fund, with €3 million from Spain, €1
million from Sweden and €500,000 each from Canada and Ireland.
Remittances for growth
Among the many projects approved in February 2006 for support by the
multi-donor fund was a €350,000 study on remittances sent by migrant workers
back to their homes in the ETCs. The huge number of migrants moving about the
EBRD region, particularly from central Asia, is due to joblessness in their
native countries. For example it is estimated that 10 per cent of Tajikistan’s
population, or 600,000, migrate for work.
Remittances are
believed to have a major impact on sustaining migrants’ impoverished families
back home and in building assets there. Yet little is known about their
specific impact in the ETCs, mainly because they enter through unofficial
means. They’re carried in by migrants on home visits or wired via grassroots
money transfer companies. It is estimated these financial flows far outstrip
foreign aid.
The World Bank estimates that $14 billion in remittance flows arrive in the
EBRD region annually through the formal financial sector. Irakli Managadze,
former Governor of Georgia’s Central Bank and now a policy advisor to the
EBRD, says the amount coming in via informal means may be twice the World Bank
figure.
The study, led by an EBRD team including Mr Managadze, is expected to form the
basis of EBRD remittance-based financial products that will contribute to
general economic development and poverty alleviation by building the formal
financial sector.
“This remittance study is truly innovative and innovation is what the ETC
Initiative is all about,” said Kotaro Tanaka, advisor to the Japanese member
of the EBRD’s Board of Directors. He lauded the EBRD’s cooperation with the
Asian Development Bank in conducting the study. “This is exactly the kind of
proposal we want to see,” agreed UK representative Jim Maund.
Warming up Georgia
Another of the 10 projects approved is €340,000 for technical studies in
support of proposed EBRD investment in rehabilitating a vital natural gas
pipeline in Georgia, where people suffered greatly this winter from energy
supply disruption.
The overall aim is to reduce massive gas leaks in the under-maintained, aging
pipeline and improve environmental safety to reduce the risk of catastrophic
failure of the distribution system that brings Russian gas to Georgia’s
capital, Tbilisi. Fixing this north-south pipeline would also allow Georgia to
tap into another which it crosses: the new South Caucasus pipeline carrying
Azeri gas from the Caspian Sea via Georgia to Turkey. Despite the cost savings
to be realised by cutting energy losses, improving the line is complicated by
Georgia’s financial difficulties. So the study will include a search for
creative ways to finance the pipeline.
Written by EBRD's Senior Writer Kate Dunn.
Contact:
ETC Banking Team Tel: +44 20 7338 6035 Fax:
+44 20 7338 6599 Email: deanec@ebrd.com
3 March 2006
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