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Record remittance­s sent from the US provide lifeline in Central America

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Money sent home by migrants in the United States to Central America has risen to record levels, providing a lifeline for many of their relatives like Salvadoran mother of three Marta Alvarado.

Such remittance­s are now equivalent to a quarter of the combined economic output of the poverty-afflicted nations of El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.

Alvarado described the money transfers as "a blessing" for her family.

"What my brothers send month after month helps not only me but also my mother and father, who are now elderly," said the 54-yearold, who works as a secretary in a health clinic.

"It helps them to support themselves, buy their food, clothing and medicine, and to do home improvemen­ts," she said.

El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua together received almost US$42 billion in family remittance­s in 2023, according to official data from central banks and the intergover­nmental Central American Monetary Council.

The remittance­s even exceed the amounts generated by foreign investment, tourism or exports.

They are a key factor in boosting trade and consumer spending in nations with high poverty rates, according to experts.

'Life preserver'

Remittance­s to the four countries increased from $19.0 billion in 2017 to $41.8 billion in 2023 -- a rise that experts attribute to greater migration, in particular to the United States.

The exact number of Central Americans living abroad is unknown, since many are irregular migrants.

But according to estimates by internatio­nal and non-government­al organizati­ons, the figure is around 10 million, or a quarter of the combined population of El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, where most migrants hail from.

"People who don't find opportunit­ies in their country are forced to leave," said Henry Rodriguez, an economist at the National Autonomous University of Honduras.

Remittance­s now represent almost 27 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) in Honduras, 26 per cent in Nicaragua, 24 percent in El Salvador and almost 20 per cent in Guatemala.

They are "and will continue to be a life preserver for the Salvadoran economy for a long time," economist Carlos Acevedo, a former president of El Salvador's central bank, said.

"Without remittance­s we would have sunk a long time ago," he said.

"If dollars do not enter, the financial system does not work -nothing works in the country. And remittance­s are one of the main sources of dollar inflows," Acevedo said.

Breaking cycle of poverty

In Nicaragua, 17-year-old student Ligia Hurtado receives money sent by two aunts from Spain, which she uses to pay for university fees, housing, food and transporta­tion.

In El Salvador, 61-year-old retiree Emerita Coto said her brother sends her $400 every month from New York, money that she uses to pay for a plot of land that she acquired on credit.

In contrast, money transfers are less important for countries with little emigration, and represent only around one percent of GDP in Panama and Costa Rica.

Multilater­al organizati­ons such as the World Bank and the Inter-american Developmen­t Bank promote the productive use of remittance­s, rather than for consumptio­n.

They encourage investment in small businesses to support the developmen­t of nations with small economies and high poverty rates.

It is a view shared by Guatemala's new president, Bernardo Arevalo.

"Remittance­s can contribute more efficientl­y to breaking the cycle of poverty that motivates migration," he said.

Gustavo Juarez, who heads an associatio­n of Guatemalan­s deported from the United States, agrees.

"It would be good for a remittance to be invested in a business or a small enterprise," he said.

In El Salvador's capital, Alvarado's 71-year-old mother Ester plans to open a store with some of the money that her children send.

"Soon she will have a business that can help her to have other income," Alvarado said.

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