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India to Top Global Remittances With $71 Billion This Year

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India to Top Global Remittances With $71 Billion This Year

Washington
: India will retain its top spot with $71 billion in remittances this year as remittances to developing countries are expected to reach $435 billion, an increase of five per cent over 2013, the World Bank has said.

In its latest issue of the Migration and Development Brief, the World Bank said India, with the world's largest emigrant stock of 14 million people, will remain in the top spot this year, attracting about $71 billion in remittances.

"Remittances to developing countries grew this year by five per cent. Remittance inflows provided stable cover for substantial parts of the import bill for such countries as Egypt, Pakistan, Haiti, Honduras, and Nepal," said Kaushik Basu, senior vice president and chief economist of the World Bank Group.

He said India and China led the chart with "projected remittance inflows of $71 and $64 billion respectively in 2014."

List of Countries by worker remittances in 2014>>

(01) India ($71 billion)
(02) China ($64 billion)
(03) Philippines ($28 billion)
(04) Mexico ($24 billion)
(05) Nigeria ($21 billion)
(06) Egypt ($18 billion)
(07) Pakistan ($17 billion)
(08) Bangladesh ($15 billion)
(09) Vietnam ($11 billion)
(10) Ukraine ($9 billion)

The growth rate this year is substantially faster than the 3.4 per cent growth recorded in 2013, driven largely by remittances to Asia and Latin America, it said.

Remittances to developing countries will continue climbing in the medium term, reaching an estimated $454 billion in 2015. Global remittances, including those to high-income countries, are estimated at $582 billion this year, rising to $608 billion next year, it said.

The bank said remittances to the South Asia region are increasing more robustly this year, accelerating from slower growth in 2013. Although flows to India, the region's largest remittance recipient, will grow modestly by 1.5 per cent in 2014.

The expansion is being led by flows from the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, where skilled and unskilled workers are finding renewed job opportunities.

As a result, the growth rate of remittances to the region is expected to more than double this year to 5.5 per cent (from 2.7 per cent in 2013), boosting volumes to $117 billion in 2014 and rising further to $123 billion in 2015, it said.

"In addition, India and the Philippines benefit from having migrants with the most diverse destination spread, thereby creating buffers against regional shocks. Given the growing importance of this sector, the World Bank's Migration and Development Brief has become an essential tool for global development policy experts," Mr Basu said.

Source:- India to Top Global Remittances With $71 Billion This Year - NDTVProfit.com
 
So it is good or bad...?:-)

By and large it's good - Currently it accounts for over 4% of the country's GDP - They are often seen as Investments specially money transfers from Non-resident Indians (NRIs) who love to invest in Real Estates in India. In case of Developing Economies such as India - they are extremely important.
 
I mean is it ok that peole in our country are going to abroad for jobs....?:cheers:

Its GOOD! Even very good. The people working abroad are gainfully employed; which may not always be the case domestically. Secondly the money remitted or repatriated home is foreign currency, which helps to boost the reserves as well as offset the Balance of Payments. So Manpower is a good enough commodity or product to be exported.
Of course; the Manpower employed abroad should also move up the value/earning chain progressively. This can only happen with skill augmentation programs.
 

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