Visualizing the Top 10 Remittance Recipients of 2024. Source: World Bank Estimates.
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Visualizing the Top 10 Remittance Recipients of 2024. Source: World Bank Estimates.

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The House GOP is beyond ready to help President Donald Trump make life miserable for immigrants, this time in the form of the Republican tax
Lisa Needham at Daily Kos:
The House GOP is beyond ready to help President Donald Trump make life miserable for immigrants, this time in the form of the Republican tax bill that proposes putting a 5% tax on remittances. As a general matter, it’s not that Republicans hate raising taxes; they just hate to be perceived as raising taxes. So, while it’s true that the latest tax bill is a huge giveaway to the rich, it largely does that by tilting the cuts to their benefit. And let’s be clear: As far as the GOP is concerned, showering the wealthy with goodies by harming low-income and middle-class taxpayers, well, that’s just a feature, not a bug. But they don’t actually want to say that, so it’s cloaked in language about “big, beautiful” tax cuts for all. Except when it comes to taxing remittances, which they are more than happy to do. When Republicans refer to “remittances,” they’re only talking about one type: immigrants sending money back to family members in their home countries. But they’re much broader than that. A remittance is money sent by consumers to overseas individuals or companies through a remittance transfer provider, which can be banks or other financial institutions. Sending money through a remittance provider includes certain protections, like the right to receive fee information, including any foreign taxes to be deducted, and the right to cancel a transfer. And while it’s not the only way to send money back home, it is one of the safest ways.
The GOP proposes that any noncitizen sending money back home be hit with this 5% tax—meaning they’d pay a hefty fee for sending their own money to someone else. And it’s not limited to undocumented immigrants; people with green cards and visas would also have to pay the 5% fee, but U.S. citizens would not.
But the attack on remittances isn’t just coming from the House. Trump also recently announced that he will be issuing a memo that would “shut down remittances” for anyone not legally in the country. Given the dystopian and likely illegal data sharing agreement between the Internal Revenue Service and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, it may be possible for Trump to get enough information to pull this off.
A 5% tax on remittances tucked into the GOP’s tax bill is proof that the GOP loves raising taxes on non-wealthy people.
The latest International Organization for Migration (IOM) World Migration Report shows that growing instability brought by conflict, climate
Migrants in the U.S. sent about $103 billion in mostly untaxed remittances to six foreign countries last year, including $19 billion to China.
Mexico Today reported that remittances will fall by 17% in 2020, and added that they won’t get back to 2019 levels until somewhere between 2023 and 2028.

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There are approximately over two million Pakistanis working in Saudi Arabia. They make up the second largest migrant community in the Kingdom. In 2016, their remittances amounted to $5.8 billion. Due to unemployment and poverty, thousands of Pakistanis migrate for work. According to the Bureau of Emigration and Overseas Employment, last year that number was 183,382 just in the category of labourers. Pakistan relies heavily on labour migration to curb poverty and support its economy. At $19.3bn received in remittances in 2017 from its nationals worldwide, Pakistan is the fifth highest recipient of remittances globally.
Yumna Rizvi, 'The time to demand Saudi Arabia to treat Pakistani workers properly is now', Dawn
Globally, migrants sent an estimated $574 billion to their home countries in 2016, a 1.4% drop from 2015. But in Latin America and the Caribbean, remittances rose to $74.3 billion, a 7.4% increase from the previous year ($69.2 billion).
The impact of migration on five key policy sectors "Source: Interrelations between Public Policies, Migration and Development," OECD Development Centre, 2017.