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Money transfers mounting
Charlotte Observer ^ | August 27, 2006 | BINYAMIN APPELBAUM, RICK ROTHACKER, AND FRANCO ORDOÑEZ

Posted on 08/28/2006 7:40:13 AM PDT by Dane

Money transfers mounting U.S. encourages cash flow across border as tool to deter illegal immigration BINYAMIN APPELBAUM, RICK ROTHACKER AND FRANCO ORDOÑEZ Staff Writers

To curb illegal immigration, the federal government has posted soldiers on the Mexican border, arrested workers at job sites, and talked about making it a felony to enter the U.S. without permission.

But it puts greater hope in a relatively unknown and unlikely strategy: increasing the amount of money immigrants send back to Mexico.

The Bush administration says the billions sent south each year can be used to build the Mexican economy, thereby reducing immigration. For the past five years, the government has worked with Mexico and money senders to reduce the cost of remittances, and increase the volume.

Remittances to Mexico have more than doubled, topping $20 billion in 2005. Only oil exports made more money for the country.

But there is little evidence the inflow of money is reducing the outflow of people.

Critics in both countries say remittances actually encourage immigration by making Mexican families dependent on American jobs.

Even some supporters say the idea will work only if the government can change the way remittances are sent. Instead of transferring cash, senders must be convinced to put the money in a Mexican account, they say. When one person makes a deposit, another can borrow, spurring economic development.

But that's a tall order. Distrust of banks is widespread in Mexico; most people don't have accounts. Last year, the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Mexico launched a system offering low-cost transfers if the recipient opened a bank account.

So far, the service has enlisted only thousands out of potentially millions of users.

Even if more money is directed to economic development, the gap between wages in the two countries suggests the motivation to emigrate would remain strong for a long time.

And the government's attempt to harness remittances is a political lightning rod. Illegal immigrants are among those sending money. By encouraging remittances, the U.S. is, in effect, trying to make illegal immigration so successful that it will end.

"I'd say that's about as plausible as unicorns and leprechauns," said William Gheen, head of Raleigh-based Americans for Legal Immigration, which advocates tighter borders. Other critics see the remittance policy as another example of how the government makes it easy for illegal immigrants to participate in American society.

Congress could resume its debate on the future of America's estimated 12 million illegal residents when it reconvenes in September. Competing House and Senate bills don't directly address the remittance industry but would affect its customers.

For all these obstacles, many experts view economic development as the only plausible strategy to deal with immigration -- and remittances as one of the most valuable tools for promoting development. A 2004 study by Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank, began simply, "A strong case can be made that remittances are now Latin America's most important resource."

Basic needs

Every week, millions of people throughout Latin America walk to the corner store or the local bank to collect a few hundred dollars from relatives working in foreign countries. The numbers add up. Last year, the region received more than $53 billion in remittances, up 17 percent from 2004, according to the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).Three-fourths is sent from the U.S., and the largest share -- 38 cents of every dollar -- flows to Mexico.

The money lifts many from deepest poverty. A 2005 World Bank study of 71 countries found that a 10 percent increase in remittances per capita produced a 3.5 percent dip in the number of people in poverty, which was defined as life on less than $1 a day.

Antonio and Fernandez Lopez, brothers who work in Charlotte, send about $400 a month from Banco de la Gente on South Boulevard to their family in Aguascalientes, Mexico. It is the only reliable income the family receives. With it the family pays for rent, electricity, groceries.

"It's so they can eat," Antonio said Friday. "I'd like to send more, so they could eat more."

Some immigrants also pool money for development projects. The poster child is the Mexican state of Zacatecas, in an agricultural region on the central plateau. Hundreds of thousands of its residents have emigrated to the United States. Groups of them in cities including Los Angeles and Chicago have sent back millions of dollars to build roads, schools and other infrastructure.

Immigrants from another Mexican state, Michoacán, have banded together to fund 40 scholarships to Mexican universities for students in their hometown of Indaparapeo.

Both efforts receive help from the Mexican government through a program called "Three for One." When immigrants pool money for projects, each dollar is matched by the federal, state and local governments. Last year, the federal government budgeted about $23 million for its share. Earlier this year, Western Union agreed to match some remittances, as well.

Nonprofits, international development agencies and Mexican companies have also tried to use the flow of money to power economic development. Cemex, a giant concrete company, accepts payment in the U.S. for construction materials to build homes in Mexico. It even offers free building plans.

But such efforts remain the exception: 90 percent of the money remitted to Mexico is used to pay for basic needs, such as food and health care, according to Rodolfo Garcia Zamora, an immigration expert at the Universidad Autonoma de Zacatecas.

Zamora is among a growing number of Mexicans who warn the nation is relying too much on remittances and doing too little to promote its own development.

Relying on remittances as an income stream means families must continue to send relatives to work in more prosperous countries. And it does not guarantee future prosperity; if the U.S. tightens immigration controls, the flow of money could dry up.

"The U.S. has become addicted to cheap Mexican labor, and Mexico has become addicted to the remittance," Zamora said in a speech in April before a United Nations conference on remittances in Mexico City.

The number of Mexicans in the U.S. has increased by about 500,000 a year over the past decade, according to the Pew Hispanic Center. Other experts believe the population is growing even more quickly.

Last year, Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., said Mexico was "hooked" on remittances. He threatened legislation to cut foreign aid by the amount of remittances to offset what he called the strain on U.S. taxpayers. Tancredo spokesman Carlos Espinosa said the legislation was never introduced because it would have been unconstitutional, but the congressman "wanted to raise it as an issue."

Legislators in North Carolina and other states have similarly proposed taxing remittances.

Jeffrey Humphreys, director of the Selig Center for Economic Growth at the University of Georgia, calls the reasoning behind singling out remittances "bogus." For the American economy, he says, there is no difference between spending money on an European vacation and sending money to Mexico.

Mexican-U.S. partnership

In September 2001, President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox announced a "Partnership for Prosperity." The two countries would promote economic development in the Mexican regions that produced the most migrants "on the premise that no Mexican should feel compelled to leave his home for lack of economic opportunity," according to their joint statement.

Remittances were named as a major focus of the partnership. The first goal was simply to reduce the cost of sending money. The governments hoped to encourage banks to enter the business, increasing competition.

Banks eager for Hispanic customers have piled in, and prices have dropped. The IDB estimates the cost to consumers on average is about 6 cents to remit a dollar, down from about 15 cents in 2000. And government officials hailed Bank of America Corp.'s announcement last year that it would offer free transfers to Mexico to anyone who opened a checking account.

Persuading recipients to put the money in a bank account has been much harder.

Most remittances are distributed by Mexican banks, but the recipients generally are not customers. The process is the same as getting the money at a corner store. Bank of America and others that require senders to open accounts don't require recipients to do the same. "We developed our system based on what customers told us was important," said Marcos Rosenberg, a Bank of America executive.

In 2003, Bush and Fox met again, in San Francisco. This time, they announced they were entering the remittance business. The U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Mexico would start a remittance system that required recipients to open accounts.

The system, Directo a Mexico, allows banks in the U.S. to send money to banks in Mexico at a low cost. It is intended for use by small banks and credit unions. Large banks can arrange their own international transfers.

The Fed charges a fixed fee of 67 cents, allowing the bank or credit union to charge a fee to customers that can be as low as $2. On larger transfers, the savings can be considerable. To use the service, the sender must have an account in the U.S. -- and the recipient must have an account in Mexico.

"It's a stepping stone for radically changing one's financial future," said Elizabeth McQuerry of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. "Their funds will be waiting for them safe and secure and insured in a bank account. They'll have access to a growing number of other financial services."

But the service has been slow to catch on. The Fed processes about 27,000 transactions through the program each day, but fewer than 1,000 are personal remittances -- a small fraction of all personal remittances to Mexico. Mostly the service is used to send Social Security checks to people who worked legally in the U.S.

Low profile

Remittances have kept a low profile during the congressional debate about immigration. Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., told the Observer he believes Congress has not fully grasped the significance of the money flow. He said the question of how best to harness remittances should be central to any immigration reform legislation."When you're talking about $50 billion it's staggering; it's a lot of money," said Engel, the ranking member of the Western Hemisphere subcommittee of the Committee on International Relations.

Meanwhile, the Fed is working to increase use of Directo a Mexico. Payment volume is up 13 percent since last fall, when it launched a new publicity campaign. As of July, 86 banks in the U.S. offered the service and another 54 had signed up.

It is perhaps a sign of the political times that many of the banks have declined to publicize their participation. Of the six banks signed up in North Carolina, only three have given the Fed permission to disclose their names: Latino Community Credit Union, the State Employees Credit Union and First National Bank of Shelby.

There is no doubt that illegal immigrants use the service. A questionnaire about Directo explains that if a customer is deported, the money in his bank account can still be withdrawn from an ATM in Mexico.

"You don't have to be a legal resident in the United States to have a bank account," said the Fed's McQuerry.

"To us, a payment is a payment is a payment."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: aliens; buchanan; danethread; glennbeck; hannity; immigrantlist; jobs; marklevin; mexico; remittances; rushlimbaugh; tancredo
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Last year, Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., said Mexico was "hooked" on remittances. He threatened legislation to cut foreign aid by the amount of remittances to offset what he called the strain on U.S. taxpayers. Tancredo spokesman Carlos Espinosa said the legislation was never introduced because it would have been unconstitutional, but the congressman "wanted to raise it as an issue."

Ok, your avg. Jose does such evil things such as help grow food or build shelter, and what does Cong. Tancredo want to do? He goes the hillary/DNC answer, tax the wages even more.

1 posted on 08/28/2006 7:40:14 AM PDT by Dane
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To: Dane
Also listened to Glenn Beck this morning and he was in prime buchanan drama queen mode, about the "death of the west".

This while Beck and Buchanan were trashing television, while if there was no television, they wouldn't have a living.

2 posted on 08/28/2006 7:42:46 AM PDT by Dane ("Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" Ronald Reagan, 1987)
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To: Dane

A 10 percent tax on this could pay for the medical care, incarceration, welfare and other government services that immigrants consume at taxpayer expense. Unfortunately this would never get past the Senate. The Senators prefer that we continue to pay the costs of out-of-control immigration.


3 posted on 08/28/2006 7:46:08 AM PDT by 3AngelaD
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To: Dane

What is the estimated cost to the US to have millions of illegal immigrants living in our country? It's a lot more than 20-billion-dollars, is it not?


4 posted on 08/28/2006 7:48:11 AM PDT by RexBeach
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To: 3AngelaD
A 10 percent tax on this could pay for the medical care, incarceration, welfare and other government services that immigrants consume at taxpayer expense.

If anything, a tax increase that I could support would be a 10% surcharge on tort lawyers rewards. They are the true culprits for the health care mess.

5 posted on 08/28/2006 7:48:27 AM PDT by Dane ("Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" Ronald Reagan, 1987)
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To: Dane

They SHOULD have their foreign aid cut by the amount of the remittances.


6 posted on 08/28/2006 7:50:28 AM PDT by ichabod1 (Peace In Our Time®)
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To: Dane

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2f/Pelvicdouche.jpg

Suffering from hysteria? All lines are open!
Dr. Demento's Power Hydro-douche--patented.


7 posted on 08/28/2006 7:52:44 AM PDT by tumblindice (A salient attribute of national sovereignty is the ability to control ones own borders)
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To: 3AngelaD

Was perusing DU the other day and ran across a post where
one of the libs actually suggested extending our current welfare system to the residents of Mexican border towns, as well as our own. His/her thinking was that by paying Mexican families a stipend of $1,000 US dollars per month,
the economies in the border towns would gain enough steam to provide jobs for Mexicans heading north before they
cross our border.....


8 posted on 08/28/2006 7:53:24 AM PDT by larrysh
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To: All

bttt


9 posted on 08/28/2006 7:57:57 AM PDT by Liz (The US Constitution is intended to protect the people from the government.)
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To: Dane
Ok, your avg. Jose does such evil things such as help grow food or build shelter, and what does Cong. Tancredo want to do? He goes the hillary/DNC answer, tax the wages even more.

GO TANCREDO! Illegals are scum! Tax the hell out of their transfers.Me,Id prefer to transfer money to groups that shoot holes into water supplies left for these scum in the desert.
10 posted on 08/28/2006 7:58:41 AM PDT by X918
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To: Dane
The Bush administration says the billions sent south each year can be used to build the Mexican economy, thereby reducing immigration.

The operative word there is can. Yes it can, but we know it won't, or Vincente would have been doing it during his tenure. Vincente has done little to improve the infrastructure or conditions in Mexico. It has been too each for him to export his problems (thanks his good ole buddy GW) to the US and let the American taxpayers subsidize Mexico's poor.

One of Mexico's chief exports is poor illegals. One of Mexico's chief imports is the money sent back to Mexico by those exported poor illegals.
11 posted on 08/28/2006 8:00:31 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Dane
Here's a radical idea: have illegal immigration be illegal and enforce the law. Seal the border. Stop all money transfer except by those of citizens or those here LEGALLY.

Your "avg. Jose" does a lot more than simply grow food or build shelter. But those that simply do that make it a lot harder for the business owners who do follow the law and play by the rules to earn a living and stay in business.

They take jobs away from Americans who would do the work that they are doing. They aren't paying taxes, yet use the services that the rest of us have to pay for. In some districts, they overwhelm the schools, forcing teachers to slow down to teach students who don't speak English to the detriment of the rest of the students.

And all of this assumes that all of these ILLEGAL immigrants are decent upstanding individual with no criminal intent (other than sneaking into the country). I can go on and on, but I won't. If you tried, I bet you can think of other reasons why ILLEGAL immigration needs to be controlled and our immigration laws enforced.

12 posted on 08/28/2006 8:05:00 AM PDT by GBA
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To: GBA
They take jobs away from Americans who would do the work that they are doing.

And you, pat buchanan, and glenn beck will be appying for a vegatable picking, toilet cleaning, or construction job when?

13 posted on 08/28/2006 8:07:18 AM PDT by Dane ("Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" Ronald Reagan, 1987)
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To: Dane

-bflr-


14 posted on 08/28/2006 8:07:57 AM PDT by rellimpank (Don't believe anything about firearms or explosives stated by the mass media---NRABenefactor)
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To: Dane

..to quote someone who gave you an old fashioned red a$$ spankin' on another thread the other day...

"What part of ILLEGAL do you not understand,Dane?"

Jose the illegal criminal rapist and thief,should have every cent he sends back to mexico taxed 65%.The tax money should go to assistance of victims of criminal illegal aliens, which would be every honest, taxpaying American family.


15 posted on 08/28/2006 8:08:05 AM PDT by X918
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To: Dane

We are a western union agent and do money transfers in our shop. We arent sending much money to mexico, the mexicans usually go to the bodegos run by other mexicans and send it that way. We send lots of money to pakistan, china, poland, russia, morrocco, and the like. It has always happened since we hae been doing it, although some of these places wire money to mexico for 5 bucks, but screw them on the exchange rate.


16 posted on 08/28/2006 8:09:11 AM PDT by hoosierboy
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To: Dane

Jail employers of illegal immigrants!


17 posted on 08/28/2006 8:12:05 AM PDT by Toby06
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To: X918
Jose the illegal criminal rapist and thief,should have every cent he sends back to mexico taxed 65%.The tax money should go to assistance of victims of criminal illegal aliens, which would be every honest, taxpaying American family.

Huh what about jeffrey dahmer and ted bundy.

So I guess you think they should be still alive and paying 65% tax.

You buchanan brigadiers logic is warped, evil knows no ethnic boundries, despite your ethnic demonization(ala 19th century WASP's and modern day pat buchanan rhetoric.)

18 posted on 08/28/2006 8:14:01 AM PDT by Dane ("Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" Ronald Reagan, 1987)
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To: Dane

Onee ILLEGAL alien drug mule kills way more then Dahmer or Bundy. Illegals make up a solid 25% of hardcore incarcerated felons dont ya know.Your simple "migras" are actully rapists murderers and thiefs.Illegals are also a solid 75% of identity theft.

Reduce ILLEGAL lies and drunk driving and hit and runs would drastically drop as well.

I notice you seem infatuated by Dahmer and Bundy ,whats up with that?


19 posted on 08/28/2006 8:22:05 AM PDT by X918
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To: X918
Onee ILLEGAL alien drug mule kills way more then Dahmer or Bundy.

Uh ted bundy and dahmer killed between themselves some appx. 40 innocent Americans.

20 posted on 08/28/2006 8:24:12 AM PDT by Dane ("Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" Ronald Reagan, 1987)
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