As Coronavirus stalls flows of remittances worldwide, millions of people risk losing their lifelines, warns CARE International

Photo: CARE Nepal is supporting vulnerable households with home quarantine kits for COVID-19 prevention. 

Geneva, April 24, 2020. Diaspora communities around the globe are being hit hard by lockdowns, layoffs and illnesses to due to COVID-19. According to recent analysis from the World Bank, remittances to low and middle-income countries are projected to fall by 19.7 percent to $445 billion (from $554 billion in 2019), leaving millions of people who rely on remittances for survival at risk of losing these critical lifelines.

While both those sending money overseas and those receiving it are being affected, CARE International is concerned about vulnerable communities in low income countries, including those already affected by the compounding impacts of severe weather events or conflict.

“Countries heavily reliant on remittances, tend to also be reliant on humanitarian aid – but with both of these critical funding sources depleting as a result of COVID-19, we are left with a very bleak picture of the future for millions,” says Delphine Pinault, CARE International’s Humanitarian Policy Advocacy Coordinator & UN Representative. “Women are being hit especially hard by these economic repercussions; they are more likely to work in informal and low-paid jobs – often without wage protection – and depend on remittances and aid to ensure their families survival.” 

Take Tonga, a small island developing state, heavily reliant on tourism which makes up 20 % of the GDP. Here remittances represent more than 35% of the GDP, ranking it number 1 in the World Bank’s ranking of countries with the highest remittance percentage per GDP. The country where more than 20 % of the population live under the poverty line has also just been hit by a category 5 cyclone which left homes and water sources significantly damaged in communities already facing food insecurity. “These elements together create a perfect storm of risk factors that will have a huge social and economic impact on an already poor and vulnerable population,” Pinault continues. 

In Nepal, a country which received $8.1 billion in remittances in 2018 – ranking 5th on the World Bank list – the situation for many is also dire. “Due to the lock down restrictions, Nepali migrant workers in India who used to send money back to their families in rural Nepali areas, are now coming back to Nepal with no source of income and limited means to feed their families,” says Pinault.   

In these countries, as in many others, remittances and aid are crucial for people’s survival. Financial support from aid agencies and from migrant diaspora’s have played a critical role in helping people to meet their basic needs; in connecting vulnerable people in rural areas to the banking system providing access to credit and the opportunity to invest in small businesses.  

“The $2 billion COVID-19 specific global humanitarian response fund was only 30% funded as of April,” adds Pinault. “Shrinking remittances leaves an even bigger gap and will potentially lead to an unacceptable loss of lives. While countries the world over are struggling with the economic impact of COVID-19 domestically, we simply cannot afford to ignore the suffering of the poorer and weaker nations who so desperately need the world’s more highly developed economies, to stand in solidarity with them too.” 

 

Spokespeople:

Delphine Pinault

Humanitarian Policy Advocacy Coordinator & UN Representative, CARE International

Email: pinault@careinternational.org, Mobile & WhatsApp +33 (0) 6 37 79 17 54

On Nepal:

Lora Wuennenberg

Country Director, CARE Nepal

Email: [email protected] 

Thakur Prasad Chauhan

Program Coordinator, CARE Nepal

Email: [email protected]

On Tonga:

Anna Bryan

Pacific Regional Partnerships Director, CARE International

 

CARE International:

CARE is on the ground in 100 countries in some of the hardest to reach places in the world with the very populations who are most vulnerable to health crises and pandemics. With 95% of staff in our country offices being staff from the communities where they live and work, CARE has the trust, expertise, history and infrastructure to mobilize communities to work together in the face of crisis to equip the most vulnerable households with hygiene kits that include water containers, hand soap, and clothing detergent, ensure proper handwashing and sanitation knowledge reaches children, teachers, and community leaders, install handwashing stations in schools, markets, and other public places, expedite provision of clean water through emergency water trucking and distribution of safe water storage containers, support and protect our aid workers, who are also at risk.