Tag Archives: migrants

The Power of Migration and Remittances

By Randy Jackson

During my time in Huatulco this winter season, I met a few migrants passing through on their way northward. My encounters and brief conversations were always pleasant and often left me thinking about them long after our meetings, hoping things would go well for them. Meeting and talking to someone who is a migrant establishes a human connection that immediately belittles ideas of national boundaries and immigration policy. The migrants I spoke to (all happened to be from Venezuela) may have been seeking refuge from conflict and hardships or possibly chasing dreams of opportunity and prosperity. Yet, regardless of their motivations, they will undoubtedly face years of difficulty, often as unwanted outsiders. Most will endure economic challenges yet send some earnings back home to loved ones mired in poverty. It is this collective action of migrants helping their families back home that gives rise to the economic phenomenon of remittances, possibly the world’s most effective poverty reduction program.

Remittances

Remittances are a well-studied economic phenomenon, and no wonder. In 2023, global remittances amounted to $860 Billion (USD). This total was almost entirely transferred in amounts of $200 or less via online transfer services such as Western Union. These digital transactions provide a wealth of information about the sources and destinations of these funds. Remittances support about 800 million people worldwide. Remittances generally go to the poorest people in the world’s poorest areas. World Bank studies have shown that most remittances go to purchasing food and education. Globally, remittances total three times more than combined government expenditures on development aid by rich countries.

Over 70 countries worldwide rely on remittances for at least 4% of their GDP, and Mexico is one of them. In 2023, Mexico received $63 billion (USD) in remittances, amounting to 4.5% of its GDP. By comparison, the Mexican oil and gas sector contributed 1.3% to the GDP. Of the remittances received in Mexico, 96% come from the United States, mainly from California and Texas. Of the $63 billion received in Mexico, $3.2 billion was received in Oaxaca, more than 10% of the state government’s total annual expenditures.

It’s worth noting that remittances sent by migrants don’t always originate from individuals residing in a country illegally. In 2022, National Public Radio (NPR) reported on one indigenous community in the state of Michoacán that survives entirely on remittances. The town of Comachuén, with a Purepecha population of 10,000, previously relied heavily on woodworking and textiles for its economic stability. However, as pine forests declined, this source of income experienced a significant decline over the preceding decade. This caused hundreds of young men from Comachuén to get temporary work visas in the USA, most of them working in upstate New York, often on the same farms year after year. Remittances from these agricultural workers support their families, enabling them to keep their traditional businesses of woodworking and textiles running. Remittances have also paid for the community church and bull ring.

As the example of the young men from Comachuén demonstrates, remittances benefit both the sending and receiving counties, whether from legal or illegal migration. There are millions of jobs in the US for which there are no available US workers. Agriculture is the most obvious example, as is also true in Canada. A great many crops could not be harvested without migrant workers. In September of 2023, there were 9.5 million non-farm job openings in the US, and even with three million illegal migrants entering the US in 2023, the unemployment rate in the country is one of the lowest in the world. Not enough temporary work visas are available in different sectors of the US economy to meet the demand. According to a 2023 report by the CATO Institute, migrant wage gains are between 4 and 10 times the pay level available in Latin America and the Caribbean. It is little wonder illegal immigration is at record highs. Migrants are often used as a xenophobic political football when in fact they are responding to a fundamental tenet of capitalism, the allowance of mobility to meet the demand for labour.

Who Else Benefits?

The amount of money represented by remittances is large enough that it doesn’t go unnoticed. Bankers, for one, drool at the possible commission on remittance transfers. The average commission paid on electronic remittance transfers is 6%. Mexico’s $63 billion would amount to about $3 billion annually. Immigrants, however, don’t use the banking industry very often, preferring other transfer services. When banks offer the transfer service, it includes the grind of their bureaucratic machinery, which speaks to their lack of popularity and even distrust by the immigrant senders.

Technology companies are another group of profiteers who seek to capitalize on what they herald as the “untapped market for financial transactions.” In January of this year, the Brazilian digital bank – Nubank – announced its largest operation outside of Brazil, in Mexico. It plans to partner with Félix Pago, an online remittance service based on WhatsApp, to enable Felix’s 5.5 million Mexican customers to receive money transfers from the United States.

As beneficial as migrants or remittances are to both the sending and receiving countries, it should come as no surprise that bad actors are taking advantage of migrants in the most disturbing ways, and organized crime is using the remittance system to skirt money-laundering laws. Numerous news articles address the issue of Mexican narco-traffickers using the cover of remittances to repatriate funds to Mexico. Reuters reported in an August 2023 article that one individual was convicted in the US of money laundering by sending thousands of small transfers amounting to $25 million USD to fake recipients in Mexico over several years. The article also reports that the average (legitimate) remittance transfer to Mexico was $390 US in 2022. The typical size of remittances makes any large transfer stand out in the controls and monitoring of remittances, yet few stones are left unturned by enterprising criminals.

A Failed Government Effort?

The Mexican government recognizes the efficacy of remittances in aiding the country’s poorest communities. To this end, they have instituted a program titled 3 X 1. This program seeks to match $3 to a community project for each $1 contributed by Mexicans living abroad. This targets not the individual or family remittances, which is the overwhelming majority of the total remittances, but a different subset known as collective remittances. These are remittances sent by migrant associations in the United States, which collect and remit funds to specific communities in Mexico.

However, a 2014 study of this program by the Latin American Research Centre at the University of Calgary concluded that there was little uptake. Of the two communities studied that received collective remittances for specific community projects, no government money was ever received. Migrants were once again on their own.

As witnessed this past winter in Huatulco, the stories of migrants, their aspirations, and their challenges highlight the human element beyond political debates on immigration policies. Even with the need for immigration in wealthy countries coupled with the effective poverty reduction worldwide that remittances provide, it doesn’t mean we won’t screw it all up. For now, I just hope those Venezuelans I spoke to and their little kids curiously looking up at me will all make it safely to their northern destination.

Editor’s Letter

By Jane Bauer

“Identity is never singular but is multiply constructed across intersecting and antagonistic discourses, practices and positions.”
Stuart Hall

Who are you? What is the first trait you think of to describe yourself?

Is it your gender?
Is it your nationality?
Your race?
Perhaps a description of the kind of person you view yourself to be?

Tensions feel high lately. Not only in the world we see through our phones and television, but in real life. The conflicts across the world remain a safe distance away, beyond our ability to affect change, other than voicing our outrage and hoping we fall on the right side of history.

There are tensions closer to home, things we can do something about. On the outer edges are the migrants, avoiding the immigration officials as they move towards the unknown. Inside our bubble we cling to our opinions about the situation- no, not just the situation- we cling to our opinions about the people- how we imagine them to be, where we imagine they have come from and where they are going.

On the inner edge we have tensions between the outsiders: the travelers, tourists, digital nomads, snowbirds, expats and gringos versus the locals, nationals, long-term residents, the “Mexico experts,” who are pushing back. Blame for everything that seems to be going wrong is thrown around like a tennis ball or maybe I should say like a pickelball.

Last year I was sitting at my favorite sushi haunt in Terminal 2 of CDMX when the man on the stool beside me attempted to engage me in conversation. I am not the kind of traveler who enjoys idle chitchat with strangers. He was undeterred and proceeded to tell me with a hint of pride that he had been living in Oaxaca City for the past eight years.
‘That’s nice,” I responded out of politeness.
“Where do you live?” he persisted.
“On the coast.”
“How long have you been there?”
“Twenty-six years,” I said turning back to enjoy my unagi.
“Oh. You win I guess,” he said.
“It’s not a contest,” I replied.

People are always having conversations like these, asserting their identity and experience to justify their entitlements and points of view. But who are you really? Take away the cloak of where you happened to be born, where you live, your job, your religion, your gender, the amount of stuff you have collected on your journey and the opinions you have formed, based on the information you have. When you strip those things away, what are you really entitled to, that someone else isn’t?

Aren’t we all just minnows in a school of fish moving through the water on the momentum of each other?

March is usually our Women’s Issue. However, in the spirit of shedding our identities, rather than clinging to them so fiercely, I am calling this the ‘Achievement Issue’. Our writers have profiled people whose accomplishments are inspiring.

See you next month,

Jane

Walking across the World

By Jane Bauer

“Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for a kindness.”
—Lucius Annaeus Seneca

If you have not ventured to the highway around Huatulco lately you may not have noticed the number of migrants on their walk towards a better life. Many months ago on the south side of Copalita an immigration kiosk was erected and manned by immigration and army personnel. They pull over buses and vans and have a tented area where I occasionally see people who have been pulled off buses and vans, for not having the proper documentation, waiting. When I happened to be standing next to a man in an immigration uniform at the bank, I asked him what they did with the people and he told me they sent them back to their country or at least to the border of Mexico.

In the last month the number of migrants has steadily grown and some days I have seen at least a couple of hundred people walking on my fifteen-minute drive home. A path just before the immigration kiosk has been forged through the brush so that they can avoid it altogether.

One day in early November I stopped and asked a group where they were from just before they got on the avoid-immigration kiosk path through the bushes.

“Haiti” one man responded.
“Où allez vous?” I asked
“Les Etats-Unis” he said.

One Sunday morning while driving in to work, moving in the same direction as the walkers, I stopped for two women. They climbed into my car with a small baby and a few meters later we picked up a young man. I asked if they were from Haiti and they said they were from Guinea.

The immigration kiosk was just up ahead but we weren’t stopped, to be fair the two soldiers standing in front of it looked resigned to their inability to do anything.

We stopped just off the highway in Copalita and had breakfast. Guinea is 9345 km from Huatulco. Over breakfast we talked about their journey.

Mari Assi, a robust young woman, with a burn scar covering one hand and forearm, was wearing sandals and carrying her 19 month-old daughter Fati. Her traveling companion was Aminata who had left her 13-year old daughter back in Guinea and the young man was Osmane. While French is the primary language in Guinea, due to its colonization by the French, their speech was also peppered with words of a language I didn’t know. They flew from Guinea to Nicaragua and had been walking/taking buses/ hitchhiking for 12 days. Their final destination goal: New York.

Since then I have met people from Senegal, Ghana, Venezuela, Guatemala and even a family from Afghanistan with three young girls. I keep my car stacked with bottles of water and non-perishable snacks and gently used footwear.

I know there are many differing opinions when it comes to immigration policies and migrants. However, when it comes to being face to face with a person in need, politics cannot be the discussion, humanity needs to be the discussion. Helping people in our path, if we can, is the bare minimum of what we should offer- regardless of religious credo or political affiliations.

If you watch the news it will tell you about the atrocities happening in other parts of the world- military coups, crime, instability, places where women being raped is a regular occurrence. I don’t need look at the news to understand the why of what brought Mari Assi, Aminata, Fati and Osmane to be on the same road as me. I only need to look at their inadequate footwear, their clothes that have leaves sticking to them from sleeping in the bushes, to know they deserve more… more help… more humanity… and more compassion.

If you would like to contribute water/ juice and non-perishable snacks such as granola bars I will hand them out on my daily commute. If you have any new or gently used proper footwear I will distribute that as well. Items can be dropped off at Café Juanita.