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CBDC Field Research Insights: Frictions to Implement a CBDC – A View from the US-Mexico Family Remittance Corridor
Published Web Location
https://sites.uci.edu/imtfiblog/2023/02/27/cbdc-field-research-insights-frictions-to-implement-a-cbdc-a-view-from-the-us-mexico-family-remittance-corridor/Abstract
CBDC Field Research Insights for the 2023 Report, “CBDC: Expanding Financial Inclusion or Deepening the Divide? Exploring Design Choices that Could Make a Difference”
In our project, we looked at family remittances between the United States and Mexico, the third-largest remittance corridor worldwide by volume, after China and India. By family remittances, we mean cross-border transfers of funds that originate from a sender to a beneficiary. The sender is a migrant worker (documented or undocumented, Mexican-born or offspring with at least one parent born in Mexico), who sends a share of their income—around 20% of their wage, or an average US$370 per month, in two or three installments—across the border. Beneficiaries are family members, typically women—mothers, close relatives, or spouses.
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