Migrant workers last year sent home more than $301bn (¡ê148bn, €212bn) to their families in developing countries ¨C an amount nearly a third higher than previous published estimates ¨C according to new research published yesterday.
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The study by the UN¡¯s International Fund for Agricultural Development and the Inter-American Development Bank compares with recent World Bank figures for 2006 of $207bn, although the bank said the total would be higher if money sent through informal channels were included.
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The study represents the first attempt to calculate fully remittances sent through informal channels, in addition to those recorded by central banks.
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It shows that the economies of some poorer countries and regions, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia, are more dependent on remittances than had been thought. ¡°Remittances represent a lifeline to struggling economies,¡± said Lennart B?ge, the president of IFAD.
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As well as using the official numbers recorded by central banks, researchers from IFAD and IDB drew on opinion polls, surveys of household spending and academic research, and on official records from banks and money transfer operators.
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Economic liberalisation and rising cross-border migration has triggered a sharp rise in remittance flows in the last two decades, with flows to developing countries up from $18.4bn in 1980. But part of the increase reflects the fact that central banks in several countries have adjusted the way they collect data.
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Greater knowledge of the size of remittance flows has helped policy-makers focus on the issue and encouraged politicians to eliminate restrictions that make it difficult to send money.
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It has also attracted financial institutions to the business of money transfer, increasing competition and driving down the average cost of making a remittance.
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In Latin America, for example, where central banks have made most progress in assessing the real size of the remittance market, competition between banks and money transfer companies, such as Western Union and MoneyGram, is acute and commissions have fallen by about two thirds to average about 5 per cent in the past seven years.
