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Remittances from Europe top $109 billion, providing lifeline to millions worldwide

IFAD International Fund for Agricultural Development - 7/2/2015 11:07:28 AM


Last year migrant workers living in Europe sent home US$109.4 billion in remittances, providing a lifeline to more than 150 million people around the world, according to the new report "Sending Money Home: European flows and markets" by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

Remittances from Europe represent a quarter of remittances flows worldwide. Last year, the amount sent from migrant workers in the European Union's 28 members states was comparable to the ODA sent by the EU to developing countries.


The typical amount sent from migrant workers ranged from $1,500 to $3,200 annually.

Remittance flows from Europe

On the sending end, Western Europe and the Russian Federation were the main source of remittances. The top six sending countries in 2014 were: the Russian Federation ($20.6 billion), the United Kingdom ($17.1 billion), Germany ($14 billion), France ($10.5 billion), Italy ($10.4 billion) and Spain ($9.6 billion).

On the receiving side, in 2014, about one third or $36.5 billion of European remittances went to 19 countries in the Balkans, the Baltics and Eastern Europe, including 10 EU member states. The remaining two thirds or $72.9 billion went to over 50 developing countries outside Europe.

Of the 19 remittance-receiving countries within Europe, the report shows that 9 countries whose economies are agriculture-based relied the most on flows from Europe. For example, remittances represented 22 per cent of GDP in Moldova.

Beyond Europe, about $34.9 billion went to Asia and the Pacific, $23.1 billion were sent to Africa, $8.7 billion went to the Near East and the Caucasus. Latin America and the Caribbean received $6.2 billion. But Northern Africa and Central Asia were the regions that were most reliant on European flows, largely from France and Russia, respectively.

Europe is also a source of considerable remittances to fragile states such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan, where these flows are vital for the survival of millions of families. Remittances did not represent a significant outflow of wealth from the 26 sending countries. According to the report, remittances amounted to less than 0.7 per cent of individual country GDP.

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