Money sent home by Mexicans in US drops 12 percent

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Mexicans living in the U.S. sent home 12 percent less money in August, the largest drop on record since the Bank of Mexico began tracking remittances 12 years ago, the central bank reported on Wednesday.

After years of record gains, remittances have dropped across Latin America. In Brazil, immigration to the U.S. dropped dramatically after the real rose in value against the dollar.

In Mexico, Mexicans began sending less money home this year, economically stranding many small towns and neighborhoods that live off the stipends. The Bank of Mexico said remittances will likely continue to fall in the coming months because of the "difficult problems the U.S. economy faces."

The bank said remittances in August dropped 12 percent to US$1.9 billion. That compares to US$2.2 billion in August 2007.

Migrants living in the U.S. have sent home US$15.5 billion in the first eight months of this year, 4 percent less than the same period the year before.

A slowing U.S. economy and stepped up immigration enforcement by the U.S. government, including record deportations and increased border security, are behind the drop.

Remittances are Mexico's second-largest source of foreign income, next to oil exports.

Nearly all of it comes from the United States, home to 98 percent of Mexicans living abroad. At least 11 million Mexicans live in the United States.

Mexico's economy has largely weathered the global economic crisis, buoyed by a national housing boom and government-funded infrastructure programs.

But Treasury Secretary Agustin Carstens said this week that Mexico will still be hit by the global crisis, as tourism drops and continued volatility deflates oil and other commodity prices. He has lowered his annual growth forecast for Mexico to 2.5 percent.

Mexico's IPC stock index rebounded Tuesday, then slipped 1.5 percent on Wednesday, evidence that the U.S. crisis is still rattling markets here.

President Felipe Calderon has boasted that Mexico is no longer economically dependent on its powerful northern neighbor, arguing against the old adage: "If the U.S. economy catches a cold, Mexico gets pneumonia."

But George Grayson, a Mexico expert at the College of William & Mary in Virginia, said there is no way Mexico can escape being hit hard by the U.S. crisis, which comes as the country struggles with rising drug and street violence and falling oil production.

"I think Calderon is sort of like a deer caught in the headlights of four onrushing tractor trailers," he said.

While illegal immigration to the U.S. has fallen off recently, he predicted that many Mexicans would again turn to the U.S. as the Mexican economy weakens.

"It's going to mean an outpouring of illegal immigrants to the U.S.," he said.

_____

Associated Press writer E. Eduardo Castillo contributed to this report.

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{"commentId":3244395,"authorDomain":"JimmyJames75"}

OH NOOOOOO!

{"commentId":3244395,"threadId":"374862","contentId":"1940022","authorDomain":"JimmyJames75"}
    Reply#1 - Wed Oct 1, 2008 3:15 PM EDT
    {"commentId":3244904,"authorDomain":"johnford"}

    Great deal for Mexico, but bad for the USA! Should we feel sorry that their "stipends" are falling while the Mexican government does little or nothing to help their own people despite the record oil revenues? Why should we take care of their people, knowing full well that the Mexican government encourages their poor and destitute to come into the USA illegally? They even give the migrants maps to help them cross over successfully with the Catholic Church's blessing. Could you imagine what would happen if you went to Mexico illegally and tried to claim benefits?

    Can you imagine how much better the economy would be in the southwest if that $24B stayed in the U.S.? Mexican advocates and lobbyist always talk about how illegal aliens help the U.S. economy and that we owe them. Yet they fail to mention the billions of dollars in social services consumed annually by illegal immigrants (of all nationalities) and their dependents. The U.S. is in the hole to the tune of billions in unreimbursed health care every year for illegal aliens and their "American" offspring. Add in the cost of education, lunches, and welfare for the children of illegals, and it dwarfs the Western Union outflow into Mexico. Most of that money wired to relatives across the border is discretionary income that would have been spent in the U.S. had the income been earned by American citizens!

    If our politicians were not so apathetic and corrupt about the border issue, something would be done about it. Instead, our Congressmen and Senators appease their Hispanic voters and businesses (constituents) that demand cheap labor (agribusiness). Since they don't want to rock the boat, they use half-baked patches to address the problem. The new border fences is a joke since the Coyotes use mountain climbing gear to get over it.

    Since Mexico would not agree to be assimilated into the U.S. as a state or territory, the government should heavily tax all Western Union money transfers across the border and either remove agricultural subsidies or tax farmers who use migrant labor. If Canada can keep track of their migrant workers and fly them home every fall, why don't we do it? Canadian firms and farms are expected to keep track of their workers and take care of them rather than transferring the burden upon the government. If they can keep illegal immigration under control, why can't we?!

    {"commentId":3244904,"threadId":"374862","contentId":"1940022","authorDomain":"johnford"}
      Reply#2 - Wed Oct 1, 2008 3:43 PM EDT
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