Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Record Remittances To Latin America Show How Migrants Now Prop Up Whole Economies


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Money sent home by Latin American migrants is expected to reach about $174.4 billion in 2025, a new all-time record and roughly 7.2% more than last year.

It is the 16th consecutive year that remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean have risen, turning these flows into one of the region's most reliable lifelines.

Central America is the big driver behind this surge. Transfers to the sub-region are projected at around $55.4 billion this year, up 20.4% in just twelve months.

For relatively small economies, these sums are enormous: on average, they equal about 13.3% of regional GDP, and in some countries they reach roughly 30%.

Honduras sits at around 30.4% of GDP, with El Salvador and Nicaragua also near that level, making migrants abroad more important than many domestic industries.



The money is highly concentrated. Roughly a quarter of remittances to Central America goes to Honduras, while Guatemala, Nicaragua and El Salvador absorb most of the rest.

Much of it comes from workers in the United States who, facing harsher immigration rhetoric and enforcement, have responded by sending more and often dipping into their savings to support families at home.
Remittances reshape regional safety nets
Mexico tells a different story. It remains the region's single largest recipient with about $61.8 billion in 2025, or roughly 35.4% of all remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean, but flows there are expected to slip by about 4.5% versus last year after an exceptionally strong 2024 boosted by peso weakness.

The Caribbean should receive about $20.9 billion, equal to roughly 10% of its GDP, while South America will see remittances rise to around $36.3 billion, or 0.8% of its combined output.

Colombia and Ecuador stand out, with sharp increases driven by growing diasporas in the United States and Spain. Contrary to a common cliché, it is not the very poorest who emigrate. Leaving requires money for travel, documents and intermediaries.

That means remittances often reinforce the role of hard-working, self-reliant families as the real social safety net in countries where the state has long failed to deliver basic prosperity.

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The Rio Times

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