Study Outlines Immigrants' Remittances to Latin America
Latin American immigrants in the United
States will send a record $30 billion to their homelands in 2004, according to a
new report released this week by the Inter-American Development Bank’s
Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF). The estimates are based on the first
state-by-state data ever collected on remittance flows.
According to the Washington Post,
the survey results are from 3,802 telephone interviews with Latin American
adults in 37 states and the District of Columbia. Of those surveyed, about
one-third were undocumented immigrants, and about one-fourth were U.S. citizens.
The study found that on average, Latin
American immigrants send money home once or twice a month, in amounts ranging
from $150 to $250. In addition, The
Wall Street Journal reported that this community had a combined gross income
of $450 billion last year, and spent 93% of this amount locally.
The survey also discovered that almost
eight in ten immigrants use money transfer companies for their remittances since
only half of these people have bank accounts.
Donald Terry, who heads the MIF, hopes that this statistic will persuade
financial institutions to reach out to Latin American immigrants and that the
remittance records can help immigrants obtain credit and other bank benefits.
The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) says that the analysis of the MIF survey is flawed and only represents a small fraction of the cost of mass immigration to American taxpayers and workers. Not included in the study are the social expenses incurred to provide basic services to the immigrants, their families, and the workers they have displaced. While the MIF concedes that this equation has not been considered, they also point out that immigrants do contribute to these social costs. All of these workers, even undocumented ones, pay sales and withholding taxes and most will never receive Social Security benefits.
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