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Overseas Haitians and The Haitian Economy Patrice Backer Promo Capital. International Development Research Centre Ottawa, Canada April 8, 2005. Agenda. Haitian Diaspora Remittances & Investment Impact on Haitian Economy The PromoCapital Example Areas to Explore.
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Overseas Haitians and The Haitian EconomyPatrice BackerPromoCapital International Development Research Centre Ottawa, Canada April 8, 2005
Agenda • Haitian Diaspora • Remittances & Investment • Impact on Haitian Economy • The PromoCapital Example • Areas to Explore
Significant Migration Patterns • 1930s, 40s and 50s • Cuba, French Guyana, Dominican Republic • Primarily rural population, field laborers & sugar cane cutters • 1960s and early 1970s • US (Northeast), Canada, French-speaking Africa, France (later to US or Canada), Bahamas • Professionals “brain drain” • Late 1970s and early 80s • US (Florida), Bahamas, Turks and Caicos • Economic migrants primarily from the North (Cap-Haitien, Port-de-Paix, La Tortue) and vicinities • Late 1990s/Early 2000s • Siphoning off by Canada of our “best and brightest” • Age range: between 25 and 40 • Professionals “brain drain” • Middle management in private sector affected
Geographic Distribution TOTAL – SELECTED LOCATIONS: 1,267,000
Agenda • Haitian Diaspora • Remittances & Investment • Impact on Haitian Economy • The PromoCapital Example • Areas to Explore
Remittances are Critical to Haitian Economy … • 28% of GDP (Est. 2004) 17% in 1999 • More than USD 1 billion annually (formal and informal) mostly from the US • Primarily geared towards consumption • Living Expenses (groceries, clothing, rent/mortgage) • Education • Gifts for special occasion • Medical expenses • New home constructions
Comparative Data Source: SOGEBANK
… But There Are Issues • Large percentage goes right back to “donor countries” due to purchase of imported products • Remittances/Investments are sometimes counter-productive or mismanaged • “Assisted” mentality • Waste/theft by family members or recipients • Long-term: • Haitian migration has slowed to a trickle • Expected tapering-off of remittances in 15-20 years
Overseas Haitians Also Invest Through SMEs • Lack of products and services provides opportunities, especially in food exports • Trade conducted primarily out of Florida • Proximity • Entrepreneurial spirit of local Haitian community • Businesses are small and face same challenges as their US counterparts • Lack of financing • Deficient management skills • Competition and lack of growth opportunities
Portfolio Investments Not Common • Trust factor scams, “cooperative” scandal • Priority is family or community • Securities laws in the US major issue !!! • PromoCapital new approach at the issue
Agenda • Haitian Diaspora • Remittances & Investments • Impact on Haitian Economy • The PromoCapital Example • Areas to Explore
Impact of Overseas Remittances • Lack of reliable statistics other than Central Bank data • Regional impact? • Job creation? • Empirical evidence: • SMEs in provinces, especially in the North • New constructions and home improvement in low-income areas • “Local tourism” flow, especially during holidays stability of currency
Agenda • Haitian Diaspora • Remittances & Investments • Impact on Haitian Economy • The PromoCapital Example • Areas to Explore
PromoCapital Overview • History • Washington, DC Workshop – June 2003 • Incorporation – Fall 2003 • Launch – January 1, 2004 • Structure • PromoCapital Haiti S.A. – SFD • PromoCapital USA, Inc. – Wholly owned subsidiary
PromoCapital Overview (cont.) • Capital Structure • 400,000 shares sold • Raised USD 1 million • 50% owned by Haitian Americans and US residents • 50% owned by Haitians and Haiti residents • There are 67 shareholders: • 36 in the US • 31 in Haiti • Focus on larger investments: • Infrastructure • Real Estate – larger scale • National production / Export oriented
Agenda • Haitian Diaspora • Remittances & Investments • Impact on Haitian Economy • The PromoCapital Example • Areas to Explore
Real Estate • Leveraging credit to facilitate real estate loans • US residents have built credit record • Real Estate financing in Haiti constrained by: • Scarcity of credit • High downpayments • Possible solution: • US resident as “guarantor”/co-payer • Agreement between US and local banks • Application from local relative