Brazilian Expats Send US$ 6.4 Bi Home, Same as Soybean Exports

The Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) wants to encourage people who receive money from relatives who live abroad to make investments and help create jobs in their own countries.

According to the IADB’s data, Latin America and the Caribbean received a record total of US$ 53.6 billion in 2005, 17% more than in 2004. The money was sent by Latin American emigrants who mostly work in the United States, Japan, Portugal, and England.

The figures were made public, in Belo Horizonte, last month, in the Brazilian Southeast, during a seminar on remittances and microcredit and the impact of the Latin American banking industry, during the IADB’s 47th Annual Meeting in that city.

Brazil appears second in the ranking of Latin American countries that receive the most foreign remittances. In 2005, Brazilians working abroad sent US$ 6.4 billion home, 14% more than in 2004. This sum is equal to the revenues generated by last year’s soybean exports.

Mexico continued in first place, with more than US$ 20 billion in remittances in 2005. For the coordinator of the IADB’s remittances program, Pedro Vasconcelos, these statistics will help in the preparation of policies to propel the economies of the foreign workers’ countries of origin.

The idea, he explained, is for banks to provide incentives, such as savings accounts and credit lines for micro-firms, in exchange for receiving deposits.

Through the Multilateral Investment Fund, the IADB will give backing to a Brazilian Federal Savings Bank program, in conjunction with the SEBRAE (Brazilian Micro and Small Firm Support Service), to stimulate savings accounts using remittances received from abroad.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

At G20, Brazil, Russia and China Pressed to Stop Bribing Abroad

Dilma Rousseff, the president of Brazil, said that solutions to European and global economic ...

Brazil’s Social Movements Coalition Comes to Lula’s Rescue

After a meeting with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a coordinator of ...

European Painters Worth US$ 50 Million Stolen During Brazil’s Carnaval

A spectacular robbery of art works by Picasso, Matisse, Monet and Dali marred the ...

Brazilian Police Bust Brazil-US Human Trafficking Ring

Around 120 Brazilians were sent to the United States each month by a gang ...

Arabs Celebrate 130 Years of Brazil with Big Party for Lula

Just a week after his latest trip to the Middle East, Brazilian president Luiz ...

Fed Up With Criticism Over the World Cup Brazil President Lashes Back

Dilma Rousseff, the president of Brazil, responded angrily at criticism voiced by former soccer ...

Brazil, a Nation that Doesn’t Read

Brazil’s publishing industry is the world’s eighth in production volume. But the whole country ...

End of European Embargo Gives Brazil Honey Exports a Boost

Honey exports from Brazil have bounced back from the falling figures observed in July ...

Brazil Admits ‘Imprecision’ But Doesn’t Exonerate US Pilots from Blame

The Brazilian Air Force confirmed that the São José dos Campos’s air control tower ...

Ayrton Senna Group Joins US Firm to Make High Definition TVs in Brazil

Group Senna, a family-owned business conglomerate in Brazil announced it is joining forces with ...