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Press Release

27 July 2006

New survey reveals a third of ethnic minority families send money home to Africa and Asia to fight poverty


More than a third of ethnic minority households, who responded to a UK-wide surveyadobe acrobat pdf (2.7 mb), sent an average £870 back home to their families living in some of the poorest parts of Africa and Asia last year, according to a new report published today by the Department for International Development. The research is the most comprehensive look at the private money transfer habits of Britain’s Asian, African, Caribbean and Chinese communities.

Gareth Thomas, the Minister for International Development said:

“Sending money home to families in developing countries plays a vital role in helping to tackle poverty, but until now there was little detailed information on what contribution ethnic minorities in the UK made.

“This new survey fills this gap, and improving understanding will help banks, community groups and financial service providers offer more options to people wishing to send money home to relatives.”

Tony Olabowale, who lives in London, sends money to his family in Nigeria. He said:

"I send money to my family in Nigeria as often as I can afford to. The money helps to pay for food, school fees and medical bills which really makes a difference to their lives. It's important that I can send this money safely and that it arrives quickly. I'd like to see the commission charges come down so that more of the money gets to my family. Lower commission charges would enable more people to use this method of transfer. With a higher volume of transfers banks would make money and the sender and receiver are happy."

Key findings

  • about 38 per cent of ethnic minority households who responded to the survey sent an average of £870 back home last year, the equivalent of an overseas holiday;
  • of the 50 plus developing countries receiving money from the UK, the five largest recipients were Nigeria, India, Pakistan, Jamaica and Ghana;
  • the average income of the senders was £22,000 and 70 per cent were between 25-44 years old;
  • in almost 50 per cent of cases people were sending money to their parents, another 25 per cent to other close relatives like cousins and 15 per cent were sending money to spouses and children;
  • 31 per cent of senders said the money would be used to buy food, 21 per cent said it would help with medical bills and 17 per cent reported the funds would help pay for schooling; and
  • 80 per cent said the money would make a real difference to the lives of their relatives back home.

A typical South Asian family sent an average of over £1000 back home in 2005 but African households were not far behind with £910. Those communities sending below the £870 overall average included Black Caribbean and Chinese. The reasons for the differences are likely to be different family structures, migration and employment patterns.

The research found that the most important factor for people when deciding how to send money home was whether it would arrive safely. But almost a quarter of those questioned did complain that charges seemed too high.

Many poor countries receive more in money sent back by relatives than they do from overseas companies investing in the local economy.

For instance, Ghana receives around 10-15 per cent of its national income from remittances sent from around the world, compared with around 3 per cent from foreign investment.

The survey also indicates that 15 per cent of people exclusively used informal methods, such as sending money with friends or relatives travelling back home.

The Department for International Development helped set up the UK Remittances Task Force which includes members from the British Bankers’ Association, Barclay’s bank, the Post Office, MoneyGram International, VISA Europe and ICICI Bank. The task force is looking at reducing barriers and costs to remittance flows, improving data and reducing barriers for firms to enter the remittances market. It will present its findings in a report to the government early next year.

Remittances help reduce poverty. According to reported research by the World Bank remittances have helped cut the share of poor people in Uganda by 11 per cent and by five per cent in Ghana.


Notes to Editors

1. The survey was carried out by ICM Research on behalf of the Department of International Development between February-March 2006 in all 12 regions of the UK. A total of 28,000 households were approached of which 7,051 responded to the survey. The remainder were not ethnic minority households or were not able to comment. Of those prepared to respond 38 per cent (2,682) said they had sent money home in the last 12 months. Of these, 1778 agreed to fill in the survey questionnaire. The average remittance amount sent by this group was £874 over the last 12 months.

2. According to the official IMF statistics, $230 billion worth of remittances were sent to developing countries worldwide.

3. According to ABTA (the Association of British Travel Agents) the average combined cost of an overseas holiday and spending money is about £900.

4. For up to date information on the services offered by different money transfer providers in the UK customers can visit the DFID funded external hyperlinkhttp://www.sendmoneyhome.org website.

5. The survey is available at the DFID website and if you would like more information please contact the DFID press office on 020 7023 0600 (24 hour number) or if you are not a journalist the Public Enquiry Point on 0845 300 4100


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