The Good Money Brazilians and Mexicans Are Making in the US and Sending Home

Latin American immigrants living in the United States will send more than 45 billion US dollars to their relatives back home this year, a 10% increase over 2005, according to a report from the Inter-American Development Bank.

The total sum surpasses the amount the region receives in direct foreign investment and official development aid from international donors.

A third of the remittances go to Mexico, making it the country’s second largest source of income after oil. Another 15 billion is sent home by Latin Americans living in countries other than the United States, the report says.

Brazilians should send US$ 7 billion. The amount is the largest one in South America, but only half of what Mexicans are expected to send back to their homeland.

The 45 billion that Latin American immigrants will have sent home by the end of 2006 – more than 50% higher than the figure was just two years ago – will keep food on the tables of millions of their relatives, help pay the rent and in some cases, will keep entire families afloat.

The study, based on a telephone survey of immigrants, also demonstrates that the majority of those polled find life in the US a great deal more lucrative than the life they left behind.

Most of those surveyed said that while they did not have full-time jobs back home, they found one within a month of moving to the US, with 38% finding a job in less than two weeks.

The average salary for their first job, according to the study, was US$ 900 a month, about six times more than what the majority said they could expect to earn in their home countries.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Finds Cheaper Way to Make Asphalt

The Military Engineering Institute (IME), an army university in the city of Rio de ...

Pí£o de Açíºcar Is Brazil’s Top-Seller Supermarket

The Pão de Açúcar Group is the leader amongst the Brazilian supermarket chains. It ...

3 Million Brazilians Overseas Might Vote for Congress

Brazilians living abroad can currently vote only in the presidential election. This situation will ...

Por aí – Manfredo Again

Manfredo again Nurtured by European classics and fascinated by jazz, Manfredo Fest, a Brazilian ...

Brazil’s Gol Diversify Fare Categories Away from Its Frugal Image

Brazilian Airline Gol just announced it’s launching a new fare category structure that include ...

Despite Brazil’s 1.5% Shrinking, South America Will Have Positive Year

The South American economic group Mercosur will end 2009 with positive rates of economic ...

Typical Brazilian Sex Slaves Taken Overseas Are Girls 18 to 21 Years Old

According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC), young women, between ...

Brazil Tells Brazilians: Piracy Is Robbery

Out of every three CDs or DVDs sold in Brazil last year, one was ...

Brazil: Polls Show Lula Remains Untouched by Scandals over His Aides

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva popularity remains intact although support for his ...

UN Readies Report on Brazilian Racism

In order to become acquainted with the Brazilian government’s activities to combat racial discrimination, ...