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Sustained growth in remittances

(MainsGS3:Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization, of resources, growth, development and employment.)

Context:

  • According to the World Bank’s latest Migration and Development Brief titled, ‘Remittances Brave Global Headwinds’, India received $89.4 billion remittance in 2021 and will reach the $100 billion mark soon.

About remittance:

  • A remittance is a non-commercial transfer of money by a foreign worker, a member of a diaspora community, or a citizen with familial ties abroad, for household income in their home country or homeland. 
  • In the case of India, the largest sources of remittances have been from Indians working in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries (UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait), and the U.S./U.K.

Trend in remittances:

  • World remittances are expected to touch $794 billion in 2022, up from $781 billion in 2021. 
  • This represents a growth of 4.9%, compared to 10.2% in 2021, which was the highest since 2010. Of the $794 billion, $626 billion went to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). 
  • Remittances represent an even larger source of external finance for LMICs in 2022, compared to foreign direct investment (FDI), official development assistance (ODA), and portfolio investment flows. 
  • The top five recipient countries this year are expected to be India ($100 billion), followed by Mexico ($60 billion), China ($50 billion), the Philippines ($38 billion) and Egypt ($32 billion).

Sustained growth in remittances:

  • According to the World Bank, one of the main reasons is the gradual reopening of various sectors in host-country economies, following pandemic-induced closures and travel disruptions. 
  • This “improved migrant workers’ incomes and employment situations and thereby their ability to send money home.” 
  • An allied reason was the “migrants’ determination to help their families back home” during the tough post-pandemic recovery phase.
  • The report notes that the 10.2% growth in remittances achieved in 2021, that too against the backdrop of the pandemic, owed a lot to the stimulus measures enacted “to underpin faltering high-income economies”, especially in the U.S. and Europe, which helped to support employment levels and maintain or increase incomes of migrant workers, enabling them to send money home.

India’s inward remittance flows:

  • The report points to a structural shift in India’s remittance economy, both in terms of the top destination countries, and the nature of the jobs held by migrants. 
  • It notes that “remittances have benefitted from a gradual structural shift in Indian migrants’ key destinations from largely low-skilled, informal employment in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries to a dominant share of high-skilled jobs in high-income countries such as the U.S., the U.K., and East Asia (Singapore, Japan, Australia, New Zealand).” 
  • With 20% of India’s emigrants in the U.S. and the U.K., “the structural shift in qualifications and destinations has accelerated growth in remittances tied to high-salaried jobs, especially in services.
  • This made a big difference during the pandemic, when “Indian migrants in high-income countries worked from home and benefitted from large fiscal stimulus packages” while in the post-pandemic phase, “wage hikes and record-high employment conditions supported remittance growth in the face of high inflation”.
  • In the GCC countries, Indian migrants benefited from governments’ direct support measures to keep inflation low.
  • Finally, the report adds that Indian migrants may also have “taken advantage” of the depreciation of the Indian rupee vis-à-vis the U.S. dollar to increase their remittances.

Conclusion:

  • The report predicts that growth in remittances will fall to 2% in 2023 as the GDP growth in high-income countries continues to slow, eroding migrants’ wage gains.
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