INDIA
LEADS GLOBAL REMITTANCES IN YEAR 2013
India lead global remittances in the
year 2013 with a whopping USD 70 billion in
its kitty, of which USD 65 billion were earned from the country's flagship
software services exports, the World Bank reported.
India's neighbour China
follows second with USD 60 billion, said the World Bank report on Friday,
according to which international migrants from developing countries are
expected to send USD 436 billion in remittances to their home countries this
year, despite more deportations from some host countries.
In its latest issue of the Migration and Development Brief, the World Bank said
this year's remittance flows to developing countries will be an increase of 7.8
percent over the 2013 volume of USD 404 billion, rising to USD 516 billion in
2016.
Global remittances, including those to high-income countries, are estimated at
USD 581 billion this year, from USD 542 billion in 2013, rising to USD 681
billion in 2016, the report said.
"Remittances have become a major component of the balance of payments of
nations. India led the chart of remittance flows, receiving USD 70 billion last
year, followed by China with USD 60 billion and the Philippines with USD 25
billion," said Kaushik Basu, Senior Vice President and Chief Economist of
the World Bank.
"There is no doubt that these flows act as an antidote to poverty and
promote prosperity. Remittances and migration data are also barometers of
global peace and turmoil and this is what makes World Bank's KNOMAD initiative
to organise, analyse, and make available these data so important," he
said.
The depreciation of the Indian rupee during 2013 appears to have attracted
inflows through a surge in the deposits of non-resident Indians rather than
remittances, the World Bank said.
The bank said growth in remittances to the South Asia region has slowed, rising
by a modest 2.3 percent to USD 111 billion in 2013, compared with an average
annual increase of more than 13 percent during the previous three years.
The slowdown was driven by a marginal increase in India of 1.7 percent in 2013,
and a decline in Bangladesh of 2.4 percent, the bank said.
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