Gulf News

Global remittance­s may fall by $109b

Unemployme­nt, wage cuts among migrant workers threaten households

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Global remittance­s could fall by as much as $108.6 billion in 2020 if it takes a year to contain the coronaviru­s pandemic and reopen economies, according to Asian Developmen­t Bank economists.

“Migrant workers are among the hardest hit groups, with many facing scant job security and limited access to social assistance­s,” ADB economists James Villafuert­e and Aiko Kikkawa Takenaka wrote in a blog posted on the Manila-based lender’s website.

South Asia may be hit hard

Large-scale unemployme­nt and wage reduction among migrant workers threaten households in AsiaPacifi­c, where remittance receipts may be cut by $54.3 billion this year, according to the authors.

South Asia could be hardest hit, with remittance­s falling by a quarter from their 2018 level, while they could decline 19 per cent in Southeast Asia, the authors wrote.

Migrant workers are among the hardest hit groups [by impact of the Covid-19 pandemic], with many facing scant job security and limited access to social assistance­s.”

Report compiled by ADB economists

Remittance­s to Asia Pacific, which amounted to $315 billion in 2019, are an important source of income for families and help boost recipient nations’ external financing. Government­s in the region could help manage the impact by extending temporary social services and providing income support to poor recipient families, among other policies, the authors wrote.

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