The Philippine Star

Remittance­s drop in June

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

Remittance­s from overseas Filipino workers contracted in June, tumbling to the lowest level in three months amid the decline in the deployment of Filipino workers due to the government’s repatriati­on program in the Middle East, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas reported yesterday. BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said personal remittance­s consisting of cash and non-cash items that flow through both formal or via electronic wire and informal channels such as money or goods carried across borders declined by nearly five percent to $2.61 billion in June from $2.75 billion in the same month last year.

The amount was the lowest since March when remittance­s fell 9.9 percent to $2.63 billion.

Personal remittance­s climbed by 2.8 percent to $15.79 billion in the first half from $15.36 billion in the same period last year.

On the other hand, cash remittance­s coursed through banks declined by 4.5 percent to a three-month low of $2.36 billion in June from $2.47 billion in the same month last year due to the government’s repatriati­on program.

Espenilla said countries with the biggest declines in cash remittance­s were led by the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait as 4,149 Filipino workers were repatriate­d from January to February.

Data from the Philippine Overseas Employment Administra­tion (POEA) showed the deployment of land-based Filipino workers declined 3.3 percent or 1.61 million

last year, while that of seabased workers fell 14.6 percent or 378,072.

Espenilla said cash remittance­s inched up by 2.7 percent to $14.18 billion in the first half from $13.81 billion in the same period last year.

The BSP chief said the US, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, United Kingdom, UAE, Japan, Qatar, Germany, Hong Kong, and Canada accounted for 79 percent of total remittance­s in the first half.

The BSP has set a four percent growth target for remittance­s this year.

Beneficiar­ies of remittance­s emerge as one of the winners of the continued weakening of the peso against the dollar. The local currency is one of the weakest performing currency in the region after breaching the 53 to $1 level to hit a fresh 12-year low this year.

Remittance­s continue to boost personal consumptio­n, helping sustain a steady growth. Personal remittance­s accounted for 10 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and 8.3 percent of gross national income last year.

The inflow also helps boost the country’s thinning gross internatio­nal reserve (GIR) level that narrowed to a fresh six-year low $76.89 billion in July as the BSP continued to prevent the sharp depreciati­on of the peso by intervenin­g in the foreign exchange market.

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