Saturday, July 11, 2009

Remesas


Remitters come disproportionately from the working poor, and many are in the United States illegally. They remit on average 12.6 times a year, typically $150/200/250 each time. These remittances constitute approximately 10% of their household income. A quarter of remitters send money home first, even before paying their own bills.

47% of all Hispanics born outside the U.S. regularly send money to their country of origin.
57% of immigrants from El Salvador send remittances
60% of U.S. remittance senders are male
63% are under the age of 40; the average age is 37
59% are married
59% have not completed high school
57% make less than $30,000 a year
64% of those who are employed are unskilled laborers
45% say they plan to move back to their home country
55% do not have credit cards
43% do not have bank accounts



  • 2.5 million Salvadorans, legal and illegal, live in the U.S., more than one third the total in El Salvador itself.
  • El Salvador's principal export is its people, after that, coffee, sugar, rice.
  • El Salvador's principal import are remittances from Salvadorans in the U.S., estimated at $2.5 billion annually, 17.1% of the GDP.
  • Remittances to El Salvador have increased by more than 6 percent a year for more than a decade, with double-digit growth more recently.
  • Remittances to El Salvador represent 133 percent of all exports, 655 percent of foreign direct investment, and 91 percent of the government budget.
  • Remittance flows to El Salvador are so large the country completely dollarized its economy in 2001.
  • 22 percent of households in El Salvador receive remittances, more than any other Latin American country. Three quarters of that money goes to household expenditures.
  • El Salvador has a 13 percent sales tax and no property tax. Since remittances are primarily used for consumption, they amount to the poorest people in the country subsidizing the government.

    SOURCES: Inter-America Development Bank, Pew Hispanic Center, The Central Reserve Bank of El Salvador, USAID, World Bank, Inter American Dialogue, Foreign Affairs en EspaƱol

  • From : http://marketplace.publicradio.org/features/onehome/chinameca_remittances.shtml

    2 comments:

    Erin O'Connor said...

    where did this blog come from?? kind of out of character for your regular posts!

    interesting info, though!

    Karina said...

    The more I get to know people here, the more I want to know about their country and it´s history. There will probably be more blogs like this to come. :)

    And I recently watched the movie Voces Inocentes and recommend it to everyone, though I don´t know if there is an English translation of it. It´s about child soldiering during El Salvador´s civil war. Really powerful.