Kenyans living abroad sent home more money last year than the
rest of the East Africa Diaspora combined, World Bank data shows,
revealing the difference in the quality of earnings of the different
nationalities.
Kenya’s Diaspora remittances in 2018
stood at Sh280 billion, eclipsing the Sh242 billion sent to the rest of
Eastern Africa — comprising Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, South
Sudan and Ethiopia.
A
World Bank unit known as the Global Knowledge Partnership on Migration
and Development prepared the report released in April 2019.
The
year-on-year growth in Kenyan remittances between 2017 and 2018 was 39
percent. In the first five months of 2019, remittances stood at Sh118.9
billion, a 3.8 per cent increase on the same period in 2018.
The
growth this year has, however, been much slower than that of last year,
when in the first five months of 2018 the remittances had gone up by
51.8 percent to Sh114.6 billion compared to the same period in 2017.
“Remittances
to sub-Saharan Africa were estimated to grow by 9.6 percent from $42
billion in 2017 to $46 billion in 2018. Projections indicate that
remittances to the region will keep increasing but at a lower rate, to
$48 billion by 2019 and to $51 billion by 2020,” said the World Bank in
the report.
“The upward trend observed since 2016 is
explained by strong economic conditions in the high-income economies
where many sub-Saharan African migrants earn their income.”
The remittances in Kenya have risen to become the biggest source
of foreign exchange, ahead of tourism, tea, coffee and horticulture
exports.
They have played a big role in the stability
of the shilling in the past three years when peer currencies in the
region have to various degrees depreciated against the US dollar.
North
America typically accounts for the bulk of Kenyan remittances, reaching
about 45 percent on average, followed by Europe at about 23 percent
while the rest of the world accounts for about 32 percent.
There
are more than three millions Kenyans living abroad, many of whom have
attained tertiary education and are working in the formal sector jobs.
The
US is a popular destination for Kenyans looking for greener pastures
and further education, with the latter mostly remaining in the
destination countries for work after graduation.
In
recent years, however, the Middle East and China are also emerging as a
choice destination for those looking for external work opportunities, in
line with the rapid economic growth in these regions.
It
also helps if a country has a well-developed banking sector, which
opens up formal channels of remitting money back home and reduces the
cost of doing so.
The
Central Bank of Kenya has, for instance, identified the ease of sending
money back home as a major factor in the sharp growth of Kenyan
remittances.
Local banks have entered partnerships with remittance service providers that allow them to handle larger volumes of inflows.
The
expansion of the popular M-Pesa service beyond Kenya’s borders is also
helping, with direct cash transfers on mobile making it easier for the
millions who actively use mobile money to receive money instantly from
relative abroad.
One of the biggest impediments to
inward African remittances has over the years been identified as cost,
partly attributable to the lower than global average penetration of
formal banking in the continent.
The
World Bank report shows that remittances to sub-Saharan Africa remain
the most expensive across the different regions of the world.
“The
cost was the lowest in South Asia, at five percent, while sub-Saharan
Africa continued to have the highest average cost, at 9.3 percent.
“Remittance
costs across many African corridors and small islands in the Pacific
remain above 10 percent,” said the World Bank in the report.
Ease
of movement of capital also helps. Countries that do not restrict the
movement of hard currency are, therefore, likelier to attract foreign
investment flows, which encourage the setting up of more robust support
infrastructure for remitting money.
Remittances as a
measure of gross domestic product in 2018 are therefore higher in
countries such as Kenya (three percent), Uganda (4.5 percent) and Rwanda
(2.4 percent) in the region, while remaining lower in Ethiopia (0.5
percent) and Tanzania (0.8 percent).
Looking at the wide continent, Kenya was fifth last year in terms of volume of money remitted.
Egypt
and Nigeria, which are two of Africa’s most populous countries and
boast of a large diaspora, led the continent with inflows of Sh2.98
trillion ($28.9 billion) and Sh2.5 trillion ($24.3 billion) respectively
last year.
Morocco and Ghana saw remittances of Sh760
billion (7.38 billion) and Sh391.4 billion ($3.8 billion) respectively
to also come in ahead of Kenya on the list.
In East
Africa, remittances stood at Sh128.4 billion for Uganda, Sh44.3 billion
for Tanzania, and Sh42.4 billion in Ethiopia. Rwanda and Burundi had
remittances worth Sh23.7 billion and Sh3.7 billion respectively, while
there was no data available for South Sudan and Somalia for 2018 in the
World Bank report.
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