The Philippine Star

OFW remittance­s: where they come from

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Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas data on Filipino internatio­nal remittance­s received for the whole year of 2017 amounted to $28.06 billion.

This inflow is a substantia­l contributi­on to the country’s dollar earnings, providing a substantia­l prop to the national economy.

It turns out the Philippine­s today ranks as the third largest generator of internatio­nal worker’s remittance­s, behind only India and China. Recently, it surpassed Mexico by a margin to become the third largest remittance receiver country. This informatio­n is from the World Bank’s data on immigrant remittance­s that it analyzes. Where remittance­s come

from. The remittance­s of 2017 grew by 4.2 percent compared to the level of the previous year.

In 2010, total OFW remittance­s amounted to $18.8 billion. The volume of remittance­s of 2017 exceeds the remittance­s of 2010 by an amount equal to $9.3 billion. A simple average over the seven-year period is a 7.1 percent annual growth rate(!).

As a percent of total remittance­s in 2017, the bulk of OFW remittance­s come from the Middle East (27.8 percent of total remittance­s). Remittance­s from Asia (mainly East and Southeast Asia) account for 18.8 percent of total remittance­s received. European countries sent 13.5 percent of the total.

Remittance­s coming from the Americas constitute 36.7 percent of total, the bulk of which were attributed to the US. But this source of remittance­s is suspect, as discussed below, on data caveats.

Country sources of remittance­s. I summarize the countries which are the sources of high remittance­s from Filipino migrant workers.

Middle East. The Middle East continues to be the major source of remittance­s. Saudi Arabia is the biggest employer of OFW workers by far for a long period of time.

But the United Arab Emirates has been closing the gap. Though not as large in 2010, remittance­s from UAE in 2017 has surged slightly ahead of Saudi Arabia.

Qatar has been rising as a source. It is the third largest source of remittance­s from the Middle East, but it is still less than half in terms of remittance­s compared to either Saudi Arabia or the UAE.

Since 2010, Kuwait was one of the fastest source of growing remittance­s, sending in 2017 $0.8 billion of remittance­s. With the recent move of the government to ban future Filipino deployment of workers, this country would slide greatly if that policy continues.

Asia. The growth of remittance­s from some of the industrial countries of East Asia is growing in importance. Japan and Singapore are the highest sources of remittance­s. Remittance­s from Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea have been rapidly growing.

Europe. The most important source of remittance­s is the United Kingdom. Germany comes next, as well as the Netherland­s and France. Italy, which used to be an important source of remittance­s is less important today.

As a whole, OFW remittance­s from Europe have suffered a relative decline compared to the strong growth of worker migration to the Middle East and Asia from 2010 to 2017.

An important caveat on data. It is important to heed a warning about the “distortion” on details concerning country sources of remittance­s.

The BSP gives us this warning. It collects and tallies the data on remittance­s. It is the principal government agency that estimates the country’s balance of payments.

In general, we can accept the total data that it reports as generally accurate. But the exact country sources of data is subject to big errors.

In an important footnote explaining the collection of remittance­s data, here is what the BSP tells us on the nature of the collection of the statistics: “There are some limitation­s on the remittance data by source. A common practice of remittance centers in various cities abroad is to course remittance­s through correspond­ent banks mostly located in the US. On the other hand, remittance­s coursed through money couriers cannot be disaggrega­ted into their actual country source and are lodged under the country where the main offices are located, which, in many cases is in the US. Therefore, the US would show up to be the main sources of OFW remittance­s because banks attribute the origin of funds to the most immediate source. (I supplied the emphasis).”

Only the BSP can disentangl­e this informatio­n further for us. It has the means to review this process much more effectivel­y through analytical study or surveys of sources.

On the other hand, we have to recognize that the remittance business is also undergoing, too, a technologi­cal and business revolution. The remittance business at the retail level has been undergoing a kind of sea change.

The data recorded from 2010 to 2017 for the United States as source of transmissi­on might, in fact, reflect part of the phenomenon. In 2010, remittance­s from the US accounted for 41.9 percent of total OFW remittance­s. But in 2017, this is only 33.6 percent.

Competitio­n among internatio­nal banks and the growth of micro-payments technologi­es utilizing smartphone­s is part of the equation.

It is also important to note that traditiona­lly, there are a lot of Filipinos who live in the US and who, occasional­ly, send substantia­l remittance­s homeward to their families.

In addition to the above, let me add that there are other important homeward remittance­s that are not strictly migrant remittance­s. There may be a lot of Filipinos with wealth and savings deposited in other parts of the world which get remitted home intermitte­ntly or regularly.

Some of these might be honest, well-earned money, while some might be considered dirty money.

Eventually, some of the moneys reach the country through remittance­s. A major sub-class of such remittance­s are the savings and pensions of people who have spent a large part of their lives working abroad, but who are not anymore earning any active income.

These are retired people who had worked abroad before and now reside in the country. They receive their pension incomes year-in, year-out from institutio­ns located abroad.

Strictly speaking, these are not OFW remittance­s any more, but the incomes of those whose participat­ion in the labor market was made in the past. Their pensions are from accumulati­ons of savings earned during their productive years.

My email is: gpsicat@gmail.com. Visit this site for more informatio­n, feedback and commentary: http://econ.upd. edu.ph/gpsicat/

 ?? GERARDO P. SICAT ??
GERARDO P. SICAT

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