Philippine Daily Inquirer

Remittance growth slow, but steady

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

Dollars sent home by expatriate Filipinos rose in April thanks to strong remittance­s from overseas workers with long term employment contracts, maintainin­g the slow but steady growth path that began last year, central bank data showed.

In a statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said personal remittance­s from Filipinos working or based abroad increased by 3.7 percent year-onyear to $2.7 billion in April 2019 from $2.6 billion in April 2018.

This brought total remittance­s for the first four months of 2019 to $10.8 billion, higher by 3.7 percent compared to the $10.4 billion posted in the same period last year, BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said.

“The continued growth in personal remittance­s during the first four months of 2019 was driven by steady remittance inflows from land-based overseas Filipino workers with work contracts of one year or more, which aggregated to $8.2 billion from $8.1 billion in the same period last year,” he said.

Meanwhile, cash remittance­s from abroad coursed through banks—which counts only wages sent home by expatriate workers, and excludes funds sent home by non-OFW Filipinos—in April 2019 amounted to $2.4 billion, up by 4 percent year-on-year from the $2.3 billion recorded in April 2018.

This growth was supported by remittance­s from both land- ($1.8 billion) and sea-based ($0.6 billion) workers, which rose by 2.2 percent and 10.6 percent, respective­ly.

Cash remittance­s at endApril reached $9.7 billion, higher by 4.1 percent compared to $9.4 billion in the same period last year.

By country source, the US registered the highest share of overall remittance­s for January to April 2019 at 35.9 percent. It was followed by Saudi Arabia, Singapore, United Arab Emirates, the UK, Japan, Canada, Hong Kong, Qatar and Germany.

The combined remittance­s from these countries accounted for 78 percent of total cash remittance­s from January to April 2019.

The central bank noted, however, there were “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, most of which are located in the US,” it explained. Remittance­s coursed through money couriers cannot be disaggrega­ted by actual country source and are lodged under the country where the main offices are located, which, in many cases, is in the US.

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