NEPALI migrant workers sent home $8.1 billion last year, making it the 19th biggest beneficiary of funds sent by migrants around the world, according to a report released by the World Bank earlier this week.

The remittances were up 16.39 per cent year-on-year despite a drop in the number of departures. As a share of the gross domestic product for last year, Nepal is among the top five recipient smaller economies, along with Tonga, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan and Haiti.

Five South Asian countries are in the top 20 list of biggest beneficiaries of remittances, with Nepal taking the fourth spot in the region. It is behind India ($78.6 billion), Pakistan ($21 billion) and Bangladesh ($15.5 billion) but ahead of Sri Lanka ($7.5 billion) in terms of remittances, according to the World Bank’s Migration and Development Brief.

India is the world’s top recipient of remittances followed by China, Mexico, the Philippines and Egypt.

The World Bank said that remittances to South Asia grew 12 per cent to $131 billion last year, outpacing the six per cent growth in 2017.

The report said that migrant workers and others sent home an estimated $529 billion to low- and middle-income countries last year, up 9.6 per cent from 2017, which had also been a record. Such money transfers should hit $550 billion this year, making them the largest source of external finance, according to the bank.

Among the development goals set by the UN in 2015 was reducing the cost of remittances to three per cent. “However, banks on average were charging 11 per cent in the first quarter of 2019 while post offices charged seven per cent,” it said.

“Many banks and money transfer operators charged too much, cutting into the gains of migration,” the bank said in a statement. However, the factor making money transfer costs rise are banks’ efforts to avoid money-laundering and terrorism finance, the bank said. “The high costs of money transfers reduce the benefits of migration,” Dilip Ratha, the report’s lead author, said in a statement.

According to Nepal Rastra Bank statistics, Nepali migrant worker departures plunged 39.2 per cent in the first seven months of the fiscal year, compared to a 4.9 per cent drop during the same period last year. A sharp decline in the number of people leaving for Malaysia, one of the most popular labour destinations for Nepalis, dragged down departure figures.

Nepal has signed a labour agreement with Malaysia, but lack of a mechanism to resume labour migration has stymied departures to this Southeast Asian country.

The World Bank said that migrant workers continue to be afflicted by recruitment malpractices.

A recent report by the Centre for Migrants’ Rights 2018 found that Mexican job seekers applying under the temporary worker programme for work in the US were cheated by recruiters who charged recruitment fees averaging 9,300 pesos (about $470). Excessive charges borne by workers also led the Nepali government to halt worker departures to Malaysia in May, the bank said.

Nepal and Malaysia signed a memorandum of understanding in October under which Malaysian employers would bear all necessary recruitment costs to hire Nepali workers, including visa and airplane tickets.

In a related development, ministers from 12 Asian labour-sending countries – Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam – met in Kathmandu last November in a high-level meeting of the sixth Ministerial Consultation on Overseas Employment and Contractual Labour for Countries of Origin in Asia (Colombo Process) and made a commitment of “zero-cost” jobs for migrant workers.

Japan identified nine priority countries as foreign labour sources on the heels of a new policy to admit 345,000 foreign workers over a period of five years starting on Thursday, the bank said. Except for Nepal, all the countries are in East Asia, namely, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Mongolia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam.

Workers from these countries will be admitted into 14 sectors facing severe labour shortages. Both Nepal and the Philippines signed a memorandum of cooperation with Japan on March 25. THE KATHMANDU POST/ANN