Philippine Daily Inquirer

DESPITE RECENT SPIKE, REMITTANCE­S OUTLOOK STILL DIM, SAYS THINK TANK

- —BEN O. DE VERA

recent increase in remittance­s from Filipinos overseas may be short-lived as the prolonged pandemic continues to constrain the deployment of workers abroad, according to UK-based think tank Pantheon Macroecono­mics.

In a report on Wednesday, Pantheon Macroecono­mics senior Asia economist Miguel Chanco noted that cash sent home by Filipinos working or living abroad beat expectatio­ns of a decline in June as actual inflows grew by 7 percent year-on-year to $2.64 billion.

‘Far from booming’

“These inflows are vital for the recovery, and their 6-percent adjusted monthly jump in June [compared to May remittance­s]—the biggest in a year— is hard to ignore,” Chanco said.

But Chanco cautioned that remittance­s were actually “far from booming.”

He said “the spike could be a one-off with overseas Filipinos merely taking advanA tage of the peso’s selloff since mid-June.” The peso recently crossed the 50:$1 level.

Slump in peso transfers

Chanco also pointed out that the “pre-COVID-19 slump in fund transfers in peso terms remains intact” even as their dollar value already returned to prepandemi­c levels. As of end-June, cash remittance­s rose 6.4 percent to $14.92 billion from $14.02 billion last year when global borders were closed to contain the spread of the deadly coronaviru­s. It was also higher than the $14.64 billion recorded in the first six months of 2019.

He said the long-term outlook was still dim, given the “long-running decline in the number of overseas workers.”

To date, the government repatriate­d over 600,000 overseas Filipino workers who lost their jobs due to the pandemic, the Department of Labor and Employment said this week.

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