Latin America remittances support investments
Thursday, October 19, 2006
The study ? based on more than 2,500 telephone interviews with migrants and their families in nine countries ? found that the average monthly amount sent has risen from $240 to $300 in the past two years. As many as one-third of respondents said they were seeking to invest money, mainly in real estate, up from 5 per cent when a similar study was conducted five years ago.
The report?s findings are likely further to stimulate interest among policymakers in remittances as a source of funds for economic development. ?We know that remittances are very good for poverty alleviation and now for the first time we are starting to see their development potential,? said Don Terry, head of the IDB?s Multilateral Investment Fund.
Worldwide migrants sent back more than $167bn in 2005, up by 73 per cent in 2001, according to the World Bank. In Latin America, along with south Asia one of the two regions benefiting most from the trend, remittances are expected to reach more than $60bn this year, an amount that would exceed the combined total of foreign direct investment and official development aid.
The IDB study conducted by Bendixen and Associates found that 73 per cent of Latin American migrants living in the US sent back money to their relatives at home. That compares with a figure of 61 per cent two years ago.
Food, healthcare, utility bills and education are priority uses of the money, but many recipients are spending money on houses and small businesses.
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