Remittances grow for second straight month in March

Published by rudy Date posted on May 17, 2021

By Ian Nicolas Cigaral (Philstar.com), 17 May 2021

Remittances are important to the consumption-reliant Philippines because they traditionally boost Filipinos’ purchasing power.

MANILA, Philippines — Money sent home by Filipinos abroad posted another month of growth in March, but mainly due to benefits of a low base that hardly tell a convincing recovery.

Cash remittances coursed through banks rose 4.9% year-on-year in March to $2.5 billion, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported Monday. That increased the first quarter tally to $7.59 billion, up 2.6% on an annual basis.

According to the central bank, 40.8% of cash inflows during the past quarter came from the US, a combination of those coming from the mainland and Filipinos elsewhere in the world who use American banks to transfer funds. Broken down, remittances from land-based workers grew 5% on-year to $1.95 billion while those from sea-based workers rose by smaller 4.5% to $566 million.

Why this matters

Remittances are vital to the consumption-reliant Philippines because they traditionally boost Filipinos’ purchasing power. These inflows augment earnings of families, whose spending helps power up an economy that historically gets 70% of its output from consumption.

Following the repatriation of 327,511 Filipinos last year and a decline in deployment of new migrant workers, remittances sagged 0.8% that, while minimal, was a first since 2001. BSP is hoping for a quick return to 4% growth this year.

What an analyst says

Michael Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said remittances will likely continue benefitting from “low base/denominator effects”, which means year-on-year readings in the coming months will likely turn out positive because 2020 figures were so low, bearing the brunt of the health crisis.

A return to strict lockdowns from late March to mid-April coupled with rising inflation also likely prompted Filipinos overseas to send more money to their families, Ricafort said.

“Tighter quarantine restrictions… amid new record high COVID-19 local cases recently could also increase the need to send more OFW remittances especially to assist adversely affected OFW families/dependents in the country,” he said in an e-mailed commentary.

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