Labour Migration: Covid-19 has squeezed migrants’ remittances to their families

Labour Migration: Covid-19 has squeezed migrants’ remittances to their families

FIVE YEARS ago the UN proclaimed June 16th the International Day of Family Remittances. Since then money sent home by migrant workers has only become more important. In 2019 remittances amounted to $554bn, beating all other forms of cross-border financial flows to poor countries (see chart). Some 200m expatriate workers worldwide help four times as many relatives meet basic needs, set up businesses or pay school fees. These flows, on average, make up 60% of recipients’ family income; in the eight largest receiving countries, they are the sole source of cash for about a fifth of households.

Read more: https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2020/06/15/covid-19-has-squeezed-migrants-remittances-to-their-families

1 thoughts on “Labour Migration: Covid-19 has squeezed migrants’ remittances to their families

  1. Pingback: Labour Migration: Covid-19 has squeezed migrants’ remittances to their families - National Trade Union Center of the Philippines

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