Migration and Development Brief
Migration and Development Brief 27
Remittances to developing countries fell for a second consecutive year in 2016, a trend not seen in three decades, says the latest edition of the Migration and Development Brief. The Bank estimates that officially recorded remittances to developing countries amounted to $429 billion in 2016, a decline of 2.4 percent over $440 billion in 2015. Global remittances, which include flows to high-income countries, contracted by 1.2 percent to $575 billion in 2016, from $582 billion in 2015.
Date
April
2017
Report Chapters and Remittance Inflows and Outflows Data
FULL REPORT
- TRENDS IN GLOBAL REMITTANCE FLOWS
- Remittances in 2016
- Outlook and Risks
- Trends in the cost of Remittances.
- MIGRATION ISSUES
- Large Movements of Refugees and Migrants
- Spotlight on Worker-Paid Recruitment Costs
- Special Topic: Envisioning the Global Compact on Migration
- Defining the Global Compact on Migration
- Identifying Thematic Priorities
- Annex A: Data Notes and Forecast Methodology
- Data on Remittances
- Caveats
- Estimating Remittances for 2016
- Methodology for Forecasting Remittances
- Data on Remittance Prices,Refugees, GDP, and Other Variables
- Annex B: Regional Trends in Migration and Remittance Flows
- Remittances to East Asia and the Pacific (EAP) Face Global Headwinds
- Remittances to Europe and Central Asia (ECA) Projected to Increase in 2017
- Remittance Flows into Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) Picked Up in 2016
- Remittances to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Region Declined Further in 2016
- Remittances to the South Asia Region (SAR) Declined in 2016 Due to Low Oil Prices
- Remittances to Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) Decelerated in 2016