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Thursday, April 3, 2025

World Bank: Remittance

to region to fall by almost 20%

by

Kyron Regis
1806 days ago
20200423
Remittance money transfers

Remittance money transfers

ky­ron.reg­is@guardian.co.tt

The World Bank has pro­ject­ed that mon­ey sent as pay­ments and gifts back to Latin Amer­i­ca and Caribbean is go­ing to sig­nif­i­cant­ly de­crease in 2020.

In a re­lease the in­sti­tu­tion ex­pressed that re­mit­tance flows are ex­pect­ed to fall across all World Bank Group re­gions. It not­ed that re­mit­tances to Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean are fore­cast­ed to fall by 19.3 per cent.

Ac­cord­ing to the Bank, re­mit­tances flows in­to Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean grew 7.4 per cent to US $96 bil­lion in 2019. How­ev­er, it ex­plained that growth in in­flows was un­even across coun­tries in the re­gion.

In es­ti­mat­ing the costs of re­mit­tance, the bank high­light­ed that the av­er­age cost of send­ing US $200 to the re­gion was 5.97 per cent (or US$11.94) in the first quar­ter of 2020.

The World Bank es­ti­mat­ed that as the COVID-19 cri­sis rages on, the costs of trans­fer­ring re­mit­tances to the re­gion could in­crease due to op­er­a­tional chal­lenges be­ing faced by re­mit­tance ser­vice providers (clo­sures of agents and of­fices, ac­cess to cash, for­eign ex­change, se­cu­ri­ty) and com­pli­ance with AML/CFT (An­ti-Mon­ey Laun­der­ing/Counter Fi­nanc­ing of Ter­ror­ism) reg­u­la­tion.

Glob­al re­mit­tances, the World Bank said, are al­so pro­ject­ed to de­cline sharply by about 20 per cent in 2020 due to the eco­nom­ic cri­sis in­duced by the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic and shut­down.

It ex­plained that the pro­ject­ed fall would be the sharpest de­cline in re­cent his­to­ry and it is large­ly due to a fall in the wages and em­ploy­ment of mi­grant work­ers, who tend to be more vul­ner­a­ble to loss of em­ploy­ment and wages dur­ing an eco­nom­ic cri­sis in a host coun­try.

Pres­i­dent of the World Bank Group, David Mal­pass said: “Re­mit­tances are a vi­tal source of in­come for de­vel­op­ing coun­tries.”

He said that the on­go­ing eco­nom­ic re­ces­sion caused by COVID-19 is tak­ing a se­vere toll on the abil­i­ty of work­ers to send mon­ey home. In light of this, Mal­pass not­ed that short­en­ing the time to re­cov­ery for ad­vanced economies is vi­tal.

Mal­pass re­marked: “Re­mit­tances help fam­i­lies af­ford food, health­care, and ba­sic needs. As the World Bank Group im­ple­ments fast, broad ac­tion to sup­port coun­tries, we are work­ing to keep re­mit­tance chan­nels open and safe­guard the poor­est com­mu­ni­ties’ ac­cess to these most ba­sic needs.”

The World Bank re­port­ed that re­mit­tances to low and mid­dle-in­come coun­tries (LMICs) are pro­ject­ed to fall by 19.7 per cent to US $445 bil­lion, which rep­re­sents a loss of a cru­cial fi­nanc­ing life­lines for many vul­ner­a­ble house­holds.

Ac­cord­ing to the Bank, stud­ies in­di­cate that re­mit­tances al­le­vi­ate pover­ty in low­er- and mid­dle-in­come coun­tries, im­prove nu­tri­tion­al out­comes, are as­so­ci­at­ed with high­er spend­ing on ed­u­ca­tion, and re­duce child labour in dis­ad­van­taged house­holds.

It said: “A fall in re­mit­tances af­fect fam­i­lies’ abil­i­ty to spend on these ar­eas as more of their fi­nances will be di­rect­ed to solve food short­ages and im­me­di­ate liveli­hoods needs.”

In 2021, the World Bank es­ti­mat­ed that re­mit­tances to LMICs would re­cov­er and rise by 5.6 per cent to US $470 bil­lion.

How­ev­er, it not­ed that the out­look for re­mit­tance flows re­main as un­cer­tain as the im­pact of COVID-19 on the out­look for glob­al growth and on the mea­sures to re­strain the spread of the dis­ease.


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