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entitled 'International Remittances: Different Estimation Methodologies 
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Report to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. 
Senate: 

March 2006: 

International Remittances: 

Different Estimation Methodologies Produce Different Results: 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-210]: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-210, a report to Committee on Banking, Housing, 
and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Remittances are the personal funds that the foreign born send to their 
home countries. In recent years, estimated remittances have grown 
dramatically, and policy makers have increased their attention to these 
flows. Organizations use various methodologies to estimate remittance 
flows, which result in a range of estimates. In 2004, the Group of 
Eight (G8) leaders emphasized the need for improved statistical data on 
remittances. 

In light of the growing volume of remittances and the differences in 
estimates, GAO examined (1) the methodology that the Bureau of Economic 
Analysis (BEA) uses to develop the official U.S. estimate, (2) 
methodologies that other countries and multilateral organizations use 
to estimate remittances, and (3) international efforts to improve the 
collection and reporting of remittance data. 

What GAO Found: 

BEA uses a model to estimate remittances from the United States and, 
although the methodology has some strengths, the accuracy of BEA’s 
estimate is uncertain for several reasons. BEA estimated remittances 
for 2003 at $28.2 billion; its model used data on the number of foreign-
born residents, their income, the proportion of income that is 
remitted, and other demographic data. The strengths of BEA’s 
methodology are that, in theory, it estimates remittances sent through 
formal and informal channels. It also is low-cost because it uses 
existing data on the foreign born. However, BEA’s methodology was 
limited by the quality and timeliness of the data, particularly on the 
portion of income likely to be remitted. BEA revised its model in 2005 
to use new data sources, but the accuracy of its estimates depends on 
the accuracy of its assumptions regarding the remitting behavior of the 
foreign born and other factors. 

Some central banks and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) use 
different methodologies to provide estimates of remittances from the 
United States that vary significantly. For example, Mexico’s central 
bank estimates remittances primarily by collecting data from money 
transmitters. The IDB used a variety of sources, such as surveys of 
remittance senders and receivers, and information from remittance 
transfer companies and central banks, to estimate remittances from the 
United States to Latin America to be $30.6 billion in 2003. We 
aggregated BEA’s data to estimate remittances to this region to be 
$17.9 billion. 

BEA is an active participant in recent international efforts to improve 
remittance statistics. The World Bank and others established a 
remittances working group in 2005, which delegated tasks to other 
international groups to (1) clarify the definition of remittances and 
(2) provide guidance on how to collect and estimate remittances. BEA 
participated in the first group, which recommended a new definition of 
remittances. The second group will have its first meeting in June 2006. 

Regional Destination of Remittances Sent from the United States, 2003: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

While GAO makes no recommendations at this time, GAO observes estimates 
of the amount of remittances from the United States differ. More 
accurate remittance estimates could help certain U.S. agencies make 
better decisions. Therefore, policy makers may want to consider 
exploring options for improving the accuracy of U.S. remittance 
statistics. We received written comments on a draft of this report from 
the Departments of the Treasury and Commerce. They both generally 
agreed with our observations. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-210. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Yvonne Jones at (202) 512-
2717 or jonesy@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

BEA Uses a Model to Estimate Remittances Sent from the United States, 
but the Accuracy of BEA's Estimate Is Uncertain for Several Reasons: 

Other Entities Use Different Estimation Methodologies Resulting in a 
Range of Remittance Estimates: 

BEA Is Involved in International Efforts to Improve the Collection and 
Reporting of Remittance Information: 

Observations: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: BEA's Methodology for Estimating Remittances: 

Appendix III: Analysis of the Sensitivity of BEA's Estimate to 
Judgmentally Determined Variables on the Remitting Behavior of the 
Foreign Born: 

Appendix IV: IDB Remittance Estimation Methodology: 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Commerce: 

GAO's Comments: 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of the Treasury: 

Appendix VII: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Remittances as a Percentage of Various Economic Indicators for 
Selected Countries for 2003: 

Table 2: Per Capita Remittances from the United States Compared to 
Minimum Wages for Selected Countries, 2003: 

Table 3: Comparison of BEA and IDB Estimates of Remittances to 21 Latin 
American and Caribbean Countries, 2003: 

Table 4: Regional and Sub-Regional Remittances in 2003 as Estimated 
Using BEA's Underlying Country-by-Country Tabulations: 

Table 5: Change in the Estimate of Remittances by Excluding Those in 
the United States for Less Than 1 Year: 

Table 6: Range of Estimates in Regional Breakdown of BEA Estimate of 
Remittances in 2003 (20,000 trials): 

Table 7: IDB/MIF Estimates of Remittances to Latin American and 
Caribbean Countries, 2003: 

Table 8: Percentage Difference between BEA and IDB Estimates of 
Remittances from the United States to Selected Latin American and 
Caribbean Countries, 2003: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Largest Sources of Remittances, 1990-2004: 

Figure 2: Regional Destination of Remittances Sent from the United 
States, 2003: 

Figure 3: BEA's Methodology for Estimating Remittances, 2005: 

Figure 4: Differences between Global Remittance Credits and Debits, 
1990-2004: 

Figure 5: BEA Values for the Percentage of the Adult Foreign-Born 
Population in the United States That Send Remittances: 

Figure 6: Percentage of Income Remitted by Category: 

Figure 7: IDB Methodology for Estimating Remittances from the United 
States to Latin America, 2003: 

Abbreviations: 

ACS: American Community Survey: 

BEA: Bureau of Economic Analysis: 

CPS: Current Population Survey: 

G8: Group of Eight: 

IRCA: Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986: 

IDB: Inter-American Development Bank: 

IMF: International Monetary Fund: 

LPS: Legalized Population Survey: 

MIF: Multilateral Investment Fund: 

OFW: Overseas Filipino Workers: 

TSG: Technical Subgroup on the Movement of Natural Persons: 

Letter March 28, 2006: 

The Honorable Richard C. Shelby: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Paul S. Sarbanes: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The United States is the largest remittance-sending country in the 
world, with a majority of funds sent to Latin America and the 
Caribbean, and substantial amounts sent to Asia and Africa. In recent 
years, remittances have received growing attention from policy makers 
in both developed and developing countries because these flows serve as 
an important financial source for some countries. According to the 
World Bank, remittances received by developing countries were estimated 
to have been $167 billion in 2005, up 73 percent from 2001; however, 
given that the extent of unrecorded flows through formal and informal 
channels is unknown, actual remittance flows may be much higher. World 
Bank data show that remittance growth has outpaced private capital 
flows and official development assistance over the last decade. When 
combined with official U.S. development assistance, these flows 
significantly increase the percentage of U.S. gross national income 
sent to developing countries. 

In 2004, the Group of Eight (G8) leaders emphasized the importance of 
remittances and the need for improved statistical data on 
them.[Footnote 1] In the United States, some agencies have also 
expressed a need for improved remittance estimates. For example, the 
Department of the Treasury (Treasury) conducts bilateral outreach 
programs, and Treasury officials believe improved remittance statistics 
could help it better target its program to improve the financial 
infrastructure in countries that receive a large amount of remittances 
from the United States. In 2004, the Federal Reserve established a 
mechanism to facilitate the provision of low-cost remittances to Mexico 
through its automated clearinghouse; improved remittance statistics 
could help it identify other countries that could benefit from its low- 
cost remittance product. 

Different organizations use various methods to estimate remittance 
flows, which result in a range of estimates. In light of the volume of 
remittances and the differences in estimates, you asked us to review 
the methodologies used to estimate remittances from the United 
States.[Footnote 2] Specifically, we examined (1) the methodology that 
the Department of Commerce's (Commerce) Bureau of Economic Analysis 
(BEA) uses to develop the official U.S. estimates of remittances from 
the United States, (2) methodologies other countries and multilateral 
institutions use to estimate remittances from the United States, and 
(3) international efforts to improve the collection and reporting of 
remittance data. In addition, we recently issued a report that focused 
on remittance products, costs, and consumer disclosures for remittances 
sent from the United States to other countries.[Footnote 3] 

To address these objectives, we met with officials at BEA and the U.S. 
Census Bureau. We also reviewed documentation that described BEA's 
methodology prior to 2005 and obtained documentation from BEA 
describing their revised methodology, which was implemented in July 
2005. We met with officials from the Inter-American Development Bank 
(IDB), the Inter-American Dialogue, and the Mexican and Philippine 
central banks to obtain their estimates on remittances from the United 
States. We also obtained descriptions of the methodologies they used to 
estimate remittances, the reasons for using these methodologies, and 
the potential advantages and disadvantages of their use. We primarily 
report data for 2003 because that is a time period for which BEA has 
statistically reliable data and because data for more recent time 
periods are preliminary. As a matter of consistency we use this period 
to report on the other entities as well. We do, however, report more 
recent data when available. We met with officials from BEA, Treasury, 
the Department of State, the U.S. Agency for International Development, 
the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and IDB to 
obtain information on international efforts to improve remittance 
estimates. Appendix I provides additional details on our scope and 
methodology. We conducted our work from December 2004 to March 2006 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

Results in Brief: 

BEA uses a model to estimate remittances from the United States and, 
although this methodology has some strengths, the accuracy of BEA's 
remittance estimate is uncertain for several reasons. BEA estimated 
remittances for 2003 at $28.2 billion; its model used data on the 
number of foreign-born residents in the United States, their income, 
the proportion of income that is remitted, and other demographic 
data.[Footnote 4] However, BEA's methodology was limited by the quality 
and timeliness of data available to BEA, particularly the data on the 
portion of income that is likely to be remitted. BEA revised its model 
in 2005 to use new data sources from the Bureau of the Census on the 
demographics of the foreign born and more recent studies on the 
remitting behavior of the foreign born. It then revised its estimates 
back to 1991 using this new approach, which resulted in an increase in 
estimated remittances for all years. Two of the strengths of BEA's 
methodology are that, first, in theory, it estimates remittances sent 
through both formal and informal systems; and, second, it is low-cost 
to BEA because it uses existing data on the foreign born.[Footnote 5] 
The accuracy of BEA's estimate, however, depends on the accuracy of its 
assumptions. For example, BEA's revised model assumes that the 
proportion of income remitted is higher for U.S. residents from 
developing countries closer to the United States and that the 
percentage of the foreign born that remit is the same for all migrants 
from all countries, but varies depending on how long they have been in 
the United States. Further, it is not possible to directly link the 
parameters BEA uses to capture the remitting behavior of the foreign 
born to the sources cited. Our analysis of BEA's estimates also found 
that they are particularly affected by the assumptions BEA used on the 
percentage of income remitted and the percent of foreign born that 
remit. We used a statistical technique that repeatedly and randomly 
samples from underlying data to obtain a range for 90 percent of 
possible estimates and determined that estimated remittances from the 
United States could range in value from $17.3 billion to $35.9 billion. 
Finally, BEA's remittance estimate includes remittances sent by some of 
the foreign born who have been in the United States for less than one 
year, who, according to BEA's definition of remittances, should not be 
included. 

Some central banks and the IDB use a variety of methodologies and data 
sources to provide estimates of remittances from the United States that 
vary significantly. For example, Mexico's central bank estimates 
remittances by collecting data on the amount remitted through money 
transmitters and by surveying Mexican nationals returning to the 
country at the U.S.-Mexico border. The Philippine central bank 
estimates remittances by tracking the income of its residents working 
abroad that is channeled into banks in the Philippines and netting out 
living expenses to estimate remittances. The primary advantage of these 
methodologies is that they capture actual or projected estimates of 
remittance flows. Unlike BEA's methodology, however, these methods are 
limited in their ability to capture remittances made through the 
informal sector. The IDB, which provides financing for economic, 
social, and institutional development projects for Latin America and 
the Caribbean, estimates remittances on a regional basis. The IDB 
developed its own estimate of remittances from the United States to 
Latin America and the Caribbean using a survey of the annual remittance 
amounts sent from Latin American residents of the United States to 
their countries of origin. In addition, the IDB has conducted surveys 
of residents in countries in the region who receive remittances and 
compared their estimates with those of central banks in these 
countries. These in-country surveys also have allowed IDB to estimate 
the amount of remittances these countries receive from the United 
States. Such survey efforts can provide statistically valid estimates 
but can be costly to implement and rely on the willingness of 
respondents to share information. The remittance estimates generated by 
the central banks, IDB, and BEA vary significantly from one another. 
For example, in 2003, the IDB estimated that $30.1 billion was remitted 
from the United States to Latin America and the Caribbean. Although BEA 
does not publish remittance estimates by region, we aggregated BEA's 
country-by-country tabulations to estimate remittances to Latin America 
and the Caribbean and found this to be $17.9 billion. 

BEA is an active participant in international efforts to improve 
remittance statistics, but these initiatives, which began in 2005, are 
in the early stages and have not yet produced results that make it 
easier to reconcile remittance estimates. Currently, countries and 
other entities that estimate remittances use a variety of methods such 
as model estimation, bank reporting systems, or surveys of remitters; 
each method has strengths and limitations as we discussed earlier. 
Further, few countries seek to reconcile their estimates with other 
countries, and others are unable to devote significant resources to 
collecting data on remittances. For these reasons, the heads of the G8 
countries at the 2004 G8 summit called upon international financial 
institutions such as the World Bank and IMF to lead a global effort to 
improve remittance statistics. As part of this effort, the World Bank 
and IMF hosted a meeting in January 2005 and proposed that two 
different groups undertake an objective: (1) to clarify the definition 
of remittances, and (2) to provide guidance on how to collect and 
estimate remittance flows. In the first case, the United Nations 
Technical Subgroup on the Movement of Natural Persons, of which BEA is 
a member, recommended that "personal transfers" be defined to include 
personal transfers received by resident households from nonresident 
households. This definition was discussed at a June 2005 meeting of the 
IMF Balance of Payments Committee and is expected to appear in the 
updated international statistical standards that are scheduled to take 
effect in 2008. In the second case, Eurostat, the statistical agency of 
the European Union, agreed to host and jointly organize a meeting in 
June 2006 of a new group called the Luxembourg Group, to develop more 
detailed guidance for compiling remittance data. As of March 2006, BEA 
had not been formally asked to participate on this group but expected 
that it would be. No date has been set for the group to complete its 
work. 

Although we make no recommendations at this time, we observe that 
estimates of the amount of remittances from the United States differ 
based on different methodologies. More accurate remittance estimates 
could help certain U.S. agencies such as Treasury make better decisions 
on how much (and what kind of) development assistance to provide, and 
U.S. companies could make better decisions regarding foreign direct 
investment. Therefore, policy makers may want to consider exploring 
options for improving the accuracy of U.S. remittance statistics. 

We provided a draft copy of this report to Treasury and Commerce for 
their review and comment. Treasury concurred with all of our 
observations, while Commerce concurred with most of them. Commerce also 
provided a number of additional specific comments. Commerce's comments 
and our response are discussed in appendix V. 

Background: 

Remittances have become an important source of financial flows to 
developing regions and have been resilient in the face of economic 
downturns. These funds can be used for various purposes, including 
basic consumption, housing, education, and small business formation; 
they can also promote financial development in cash-based economies. 
Because of the importance of these flows to many developing countries, 
in recent years, countries that send remittances and receive 
remittances, along with international organizations, have expressed 
increasing interest in understanding immigrants' remittance practices. 

According to the 2000 Census, the 1990s saw the largest increase in the 
foreign-born population that entered the United States, compared with 
any other 10-year period. IMF figures show that in 2004, immigrants in 
the United States sent over $29.9 billion in remittances, more than any 
other country. Saudi Arabia was the second largest remittance-sending 
country; however, as shown in figure 1, the volume of remittances from 
Saudi Arabia has been falling since 1994, while that from the United 
States has been steadily increasing. 

Figure 1: Largest Sources of Remittances, 1990-2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

For some countries, remittances constitute the single largest source of 
foreign currency and can often rival direct foreign investment in 
amounts. World Bank data show that for selected countries remittances 
exceed the flows of official development assistance and foreign direct 
investment and are relatively large compared to exports and gross 
national income--particularly for the Dominican Republic and the 
Philippines (see table 1). 

Table 1: Remittances as a Percentage of Various Economic Indicators for 
Selected Countries for 2003: 

Country: Brazil; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 3.4%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 953.1%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
27.8%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 0.6%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 5.7%. 

Country: Colombia; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 18.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 383.5%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
176.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 3.8%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 28.5%. 

Country: Dominican Republic; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 27.1%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 
3371.5%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
750.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 12.5%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 918.4%. 

Country: Egypt; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 16.6%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 331.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
1247.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 3.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 21.8%. 

Country: India; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 19.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 
1847.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
407.7%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 3.0%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 17.6%. 

Country: Mexico; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 8.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 
14147.9%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
135.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 2.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 24.8%. 

Country: Morocco; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 25.6%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 691.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
158.6%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 9.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 26.1%. 

Country: Nigeria; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 5.9%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 528.0%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
139.8%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 3.5%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 23.5%. 

Country: Philippines; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 20.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 
1068.9%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
2470.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 9.1%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 57.7%. 

Country: Poland; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 3.3%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 194.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
56.1%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 1.1%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 7.1%. 

Country: World Total; 
Remittances as a percentage of exports of goods and services: 1.8%; 
Remittances as a percentage of official development assistance: 223.5%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign direct investment net inflows: 
30.2%; 
Remittances as a percentage of gross national income: 0.5%; 
Remittances as a percentage of foreign reserves: 5.6%. 

Source: GAO analysis of World Bank data. 

Notes: Data are derived from remittance estimates reported in the World 
Bank's Global Development Finance. "Reserves" are total foreign 
exchange reserves, excluding gold. The countries selected are the top 
recipients of remittances in their respective regions. 

[End of table] 

Remittances are also very important for those households that receive 
them. Table 2 shows the minimum wage per month for several developing 
countries as well as our computation of the 2003 per capita remittances 
from the United States per month. As can be seen from this table, 
remittances received by households on a monthly basis tend to 
substantially exceed the monthly minimum wage for these countries. For 
example, per capita, remittances to households in the Philippines are 
almost five times the monthly minimum wage a Filipino worker would make 
in the retail and service sector. 

Table 2: Per Capita Remittances from the United States Compared to 
Minimum Wages for Selected Countries, 2003: 

Country: Bangladesh; 
Minimum wage per month (in U.S. dollars): $30; 
Per capita remittances from the United States per month (in U.S. 
dollars): $137; 
Percentage of minimum wage per month to per capita remittances from the 
United States per month: $457; 
Month of income at the minimum wage that the per capita remittance from 
the United States would replace (in months): 4.6%. 

Country: El Salvador; 
Minimum wage per month (in U.S. dollars): $49; 
Per capita remittances from the United States per month (in U.S. 
dollars): $189; 
Percentage of minimum wage per month to per capita remittances from the 
United States per month: $386; 
Month of income at the minimum wage that the per capita remittance from 
the United States would replace (in months): 3.9%. 

Country: Ghana; 
Minimum wage per month (in U.S. dollars): $26; 
Per capita remittances from the United States per month (in U.S. 
dollars): $177; 
Percentage of minimum wage per month to per capita remittances from the 
United States per month: $681; 
Month of income at the minimum wage that the per capita remittance from 
the United States would replace (in months): 6.8%. 

Country: Philippines; 
Minimum wage per month (in U.S. dollars): $38; 
Per capita remittances from the United States per month (in U.S. 
dollars): $178; 
Percentage of minimum wage per month to per capita remittances from the 
United States per month: $468; 
Month of income at the minimum wage that the per capita remittance from 
the United States would replace (in months): 4.7%. 

Country: Romania; 
Minimum wage per month (in U.S. dollars): $84; 
Per capita remittances from the United States per month (in U.S. 
dollars): $200; 
Percentage of minimum wage per month to per capita remittances from the 
United States per month: $239; 
Month of income at the minimum wage that the per capita remittance from 
the United States would replace (in months): 2.4%. 

Source: GAO calculations using BEA's underlying tabulations for 
remittances from the United States in 2003 and data from the 
International Labor Organization's minimum wages database. 

Note: The minimum wage in developing countries generally applies to 
urban workers. 

[End of table] 

The IMF collects and publishes official estimates of remittances sent 
from its member countries, including the United States, as part of its 
balance of payments statistics. The IMF currently reports the sums of 
"workers' remittances" and "compensation of employees" as the best 
measure of total personal remittances. According to IMF, "workers' 
remittances" are transfers by migrants who are employed in countries 
other than their birth countries and are considered residents there; 
"compensation of employees" is made up of wages, salaries, and other 
benefits earned by individuals in economies other than those in which 
they are residents, for work performed or paid for by residents of 
those economies. As a result, compensation of employees applies only to 
individuals away from their place of origin for less than a 
year.[Footnote 6] 

In the United States, no U.S. government agency tracks the flow of 
remittances through the payment system. Because of its role in 
compiling balance of payments statistics, BEA provides to the IMF 
official estimates of U.S. remittance inflows and outflows. BEA 
publishes remittance estimates in a different manner than reported in 
the IMF's balance of payment statistics. BEA includes estimates of 
remittances by the foreign-born population residing in the United 
States to households abroad in the published item called "private 
remittances and other transfers." This category is broader than the 
international definition of remittances, as it also includes payments 
or receipts of nongovernmental U.S. entities and foreign entities. 
Also, BEA publishes its estimates of "private remittances and other 
transfers" in its tables of international transactions accounts, 
defining it as the difference between transfers to and transfers from 
the United States. However, BEA provides to the IMF an estimate of 
remittances that flow from the United States to the world based on its 
underlying country-by-country tabulations. Until this year, BEA only 
provided this estimate to the IMF. For the first time, BEA published 
the estimate it provided to the IMF, as well as revised estimates back 
to 1991, in the July 2005 Survey of Current Business.[Footnote 7] 

The majority of remittances from the United States flow to Latin 
America, which includes Mexico, Central America, South America, and the 
Caribbean (see fig. 2). A large amount also flows to Asia, including 
the Philippines. 

Figure 2: Regional Destination of Remittances Sent from the United 
States, 2003: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: The shaded parts of the bar signify those countries, or in the 
case of Europe, regions, that make up the large majority of remittances 
received from the United States in each location. 

[End of figure] 

There are many obstacles to accurately estimating remittances. First, 
many transactions may go through unregulated informal channels from 
which information cannot be garnered for inclusion in official 
estimates. While there are no official estimates, some experts believe 
that a large amount of remittances flow through this system, with 
market observers estimating that informal flows can range from 50 
percent to 250 percent of recorded remittance flows. Second, countries 
do not always report remittance estimates or do not report them 
according to commonly held IMF definitions, which exclude transfers by 
the foreign born who have been in-country for less than one year. 
Variations in data compilation procedures occur partially due to 
different interpretations of definitions and classifications. In most 
cases, however, data weaknesses and omissions are due to difficulties 
in obtaining the necessary data. For example, the World Bank and other 
international organizations have indicated that developing countries 
with large remittance inflows often have a relatively weak capacity and 
limited resources, even though remittances are a large item in their 
balance of payments statistics. Countries with large remittance 
outflows often give lower priority to improvements in remittance 
statistics because they are a relatively small item in their balance of 
payments statistics, according to the World Bank and other 
international organizations. 

BEA Uses a Model to Estimate Remittances Sent from the United States, 
but the Accuracy of BEA's Estimate Is Uncertain for Several Reasons: 

BEA uses a model to estimate remittances (which it calls "personal 
transfers") from the United States. Although BEA's methodology has some 
strengths, the accuracy of BEA's estimate is uncertain for a number of 
reasons. BEA estimated that remittances from the United States in 2003 
were $28.2 billion. To arrive at this estimate, BEA used a model that 
estimates remittances based on demographic information on the foreign 
born, such as their total number, income, and the percentage of income 
they remitted. In 2005, BEA revised its model for estimating 
remittances and incorporated more current Census Bureau data on the 
size and demographic characteristics of the foreign-born population of 
the United States; however, the model is limited particularly by lack 
of current data on the proportion of income immigrants were likely to 
remit and the assumptions BEA makes about its data. In addition, BEA 
uses the more current census data in a way that may double-count some 
immigrants. 

BEA's Methodology Relies on Existing Data and BEA's Assumptions to 
Estimate Remittances: 

Prior to 2005, to derive its annual estimate of remittances sent from 
the United States, BEA developed a model comprised of three factors-- 
the number of the foreign born, their family income, and the proportion 
of income remitted. The count of the foreign born, their income, and 
other demographic characteristics were obtained from information 
aggregated annually from U.S. Bureau of the Census surveys. These data 
were arrayed by length of residency in the United States and family 
types linked to marital status (e.g., married foreign head of 
households, native-born married to foreign-born spouse, and unmarried 
individuals). The remitter was assumed to be the household head. BEA 
extrapolated the foreign-born population derived from the 1990 
Decennial Census using indicators, including the Census Bureau's annual 
Current Population Survey (CPS).[Footnote 8] 

To estimate the proportion of income immigrants were likely to remit, 
BEA relied on the 1989 Legalized Population Survey (LPS1) and the 1992 
Legalized Population Follow-Up Survey (LPS2), which were conducted as a 
result of the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 
(IRCA).[Footnote 9] BEA then combined the information obtained from 
LPS1 and LPS2 with demographic and income information obtained from the 
CPS to arrive at the total amount of remittances sent from the United 
States. For a more detailed description of BEA's methodology for 
estimating remittances, see appendix II. 

In 2005, BEA made several revisions to its methodology to include more 
recent census data, and recent studies on the foreign born and their 
remitting behaviors. First, BEA incorporated data on the foreign-born 
population and their income from the 2000 Census and the American 
Community Survey (ACS), which is available annually, unlike decennial 
census data, and thus requires less extrapolation of population and 
income trends.[Footnote 10] According to BEA, these data will enable a 
better breakdown of the foreign-born population by all relevant 
characteristics on an annual basis. The ACS data on the number and 
income of the adult foreign-born population are arrayed by their 
gender, duration of stay, presence or absence of children, and per 
capita income of recipient countries and proximity to the United 
States. BEA then used its own judgment to determine the percentage of 
the adult foreign-born population that remits and the probability of 
remitting from information gathered from various academic studies 
published between 1995 and 2004, as well as LPS1 and LPS2, which BEA 
used in its earlier model.[Footnote 11] BEA revised its estimates back 
to 1991 using this new approach, which resulted in an increase in 
estimated remittances for all years. Figure 3 shows the data that are 
included in BEA's model and how the remittance estimate is calculated. 

Figure 3: BEA's Methodology for Estimating Remittances, 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

In most cases, BEA provides only a global estimate of remittances and 
does not publish remittance statistics about remittances from the 
United States to individual countries. BEA stated that some data 
elements are not available for some time periods or geographic areas, 
so it must undertake a variety of methods to fill the data gaps in 
order to produce the underlying tabulations needed for an aggregate 
estimate for the world. BEA cautions that disaggregating its estimate 
for the world is error-prone and expresses confidence only in its 
aggregate estimate. Further, according to BEA, in moving from the 
global estimate to increasingly smaller geographic areas or countries, 
the average errors in the underlying tabulations increase. When it 
estimates remittances for selected regions, it publishes them on a net 
(inflows minus outflows) basis. 

The Accuracy of BEA's Remittances Estimates Is Affected by the Quality 
of the Data and the Assumptions Used in the Methodology: 

BEA's approach has several strengths: in theory, it captures both 
formal and informal channels of sending remittances. It is also low- 
cost because it relies on available data and not on eliciting data from 
a foreign-born population that may not have an incentive to provide 
accurate data. However, the accuracy of BEA's estimate is affected by 
the quality of the data available to BEA. A critical component of the 
methodology relies on information about the remitting behavior (e.g., 
amount, frequency) of the foreign born. Prior to 2005, the primary data 
available to BEA were the 1989 LPS1 and the 1992 LPS2; however, these 
surveys may not have been appropriate for use in estimating remittances 
of all the foreign born because they sampled a population participating 
in a special legalization program primarily aimed at Latin American 
immigrants. The LPS1 and LPS2 excluded undocumented aliens, temporary 
residents who did not wish (or were not eligible) for legal status, and 
legal immigrants who became legalized through processes other than 
IRCA. The survey design did not provide a way to more extensively 
sample immigrant groups more likely to remit than others (e.g. the 
foreign born with less than 10 years of residence in the United 
States). In addition, recent census data show that some basic 
demographic characteristics of the foreign born have changed 
significantly since the LPS1 and LPS2 surveys were done. 

BEA's revisions to its methodology recognize these changes in the 
foreign born population. In its revision, BEA reviewed a number of 
academic studies to update the findings of the LPS1 and LPS2 and 
published the sources in the July 2005 Survey of Current Business, 
however, the estimates on the proportion of income remitted cannot be 
directly tracked to these source documents. Although this approach is 
more transparent than the prior approach of relying primarily on LPS1 
and LPS2, BEA's estimate is still affected by its "judgment" of how it 
incorporates information from the academic studies it is now using, and 
the assumptions it makes in its model. For example, two of BEA's 
assumptions are that the proportion of income remitted is higher for 
U.S. residents from developing countries than developed countries, and 
that the percentage of the foreign born that remit is the same for all 
countries and only varies based on how long they have been in the 
United States. Our analysis suggests that the final BEA estimates of 
remittances are affected by these assumptions. We used a statistical 
technique that repeatedly and randomly samples from underlying data to 
obtain the range for 90 percent of possible estimates and determined 
this to be between $17.3 billion and $35.9 billion. See appendix III 
for the analysis we used to determine these ranges. 

BEA's Revised Methodology Includes Remittances Sent by Some of the 
Foreign Born Who Have Been in the United States for Less Than One Year: 

Remittance estimation in the balance of payments framework generally 
separates remitters by their length of residency in host countries. All 
remittances are presumably sent by the foreign born who have been in 
the host country for greater than one year, while those that are in a 
country for less than a year are presumed to be temporary, earning only 
compensation. For this reason, some experts compile remittances as the 
sum of (1) the remittances sent by those in country greater than a year 
and (2) the compensation for those in-country for less than a year. In 
its description of its revised methodology, BEA states that it excludes 
transfers by the foreign born who have been in the United States for 
less than 1 year from its measure of remittances; however, BEA uses a 
U.S.-residency-duration grouping of 0-5 years in its personal 
remittances calculation. It thus includes both employees who are in the 
United States for less than or equal to 1 year, and migrants who are in 
the United States for more than a year, in its estimates of personal 
remittances. Our analysis determined that BEA's estimates of 
remittances are therefore potentially overstated by up to $377 million 
because they include estimates for approximately 467,000 foreign-born 
individuals who were in their first year of residency in the United 
States, according to 2003 ACS data. 

Other Entities Use Different Estimation Methodologies Resulting in a 
Range of Remittance Estimates: 

Some central banks and IDB use a variety of methodologies and data 
sources to estimate remittances.[Footnote 12] The central banks of 
Mexico and the Philippines, two of the major recipients of remittances 
from the United States, track funds coming into their countries. The 
IDB, a multilateral organization that provides financing for economic, 
social, and institutional development projects for Latin America and 
the Caribbean, estimates remittances on a regional basis--primarily 
through the use of surveys. The remittance estimates produced by these 
methodologies vary from each other and from BEA's estimates, thus 
further illustrating the dependency of estimates on their methods and 
data. 

Central Banks of Mexico and the Philippines Track Remittance Flows into 
Their Countries: 

The Central Bank of Mexico, known as the Banco de México (Banxico), 
tracks remittance flows to Mexico with the help of a regulatory 
reporting requirement on money transmitters. Since 2003, Mexico's 
methodology for estimating remittances has required firms that receive 
remittances to report the amount of money received and the number of 
transactions conducted between the United States and Mexico on a 
monthly basis. A Banxico official stated that the firms' systems that 
channel the information to Banxico are designed to transfer money from 
person to person and that the firms make the determination if a 
transaction is a person-to-person transfer. He stated that these 
systems are not efficient enough for commercial transactions; the 
likelihood that other types of transactions may be getting into the 
systems is negligible because the systems that have been developed are 
designed for personal remittances. The Banxico official stated that 
Banxico is confident in its estimates because it believes the vast 
majority of firms (about 90 percent) are reporting and, while some 
transactions that are not personal remittances may be getting through, 
this is a very small portion. To track remittances through informal 
channels such as couriers, at the U.S.-Mexico border Banxico conducts a 
survey of Mexicans returning to visit relatives. The survey asks 
questions about funds and goods they are bringing to relatives. 
However, these individuals, according to the Banxico official, are 
often reluctant to answer these questions. 

The Philippine government has established a formal program whereby it 
registers and tracks its resident Overseas Filipino Workers (OFW). This 
program provides data to the government on the type of employment these 
workers obtain as well as their salaries. The Philippine central bank, 
known as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), estimates remittances 
channeled into banks, which are already net of living expenses of these 
workers. However, BSP officials caution that the country source data 
are not truly reflective of remittances coming from a country, 
particularly from the United States, because most remittance centers 
for OFWs (e.g., Saudi Arabia, Japan, and Taiwan) send funds through 
correspondent banks in the United States, which then send the funds to 
banks in the Philippines. The BSP only captures the most immediate 
source of OFWs' funds coming into the Philippines, primarily U.S. 
correspondent banks. Thus, this methodology overstates the funds being 
remitted from the United States to the Philippines because it includes 
funds from other countries, not just from Filipino workers in the 
United States. 

The BSP also recently revised its methodology to track remittances that 
flow outside of banks using results of the Survey of Overseas 
Filipinos. Specifically, these remittances are funds sent by OFWs 
through friends and relatives, or amounts brought in by OFWs when they 
return home. This revision caused the BSP to increase its overall 
estimate of remittances into the Philippines by $1.7 billion (20 
percent) in 2004. BSP officials stated that they are in the process of 
updating prior years' figures.[Footnote 13] 

The primary advantages of these tracking methodologies are that they 
capture actual or projected remittance flows, as well as rapid or 
sudden changes in the characteristics of remitters--such as the average 
amount remitted or the frequency of remitting. However, these methods 
are limited in their ability to capture remittances sent through the 
informal sector and to distinguish between personal remittances and 
other types of personal business transactions when money transfer 
operators and banks do not correctly code the remittance transactions. 

The IDB Uses a Variety of Sources to Estimate Remittances Flows to 
Latin America and the Caribbean: 

Since the year 2000, the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) of the IDB 
has been studying the issue of remittances and their impact on the 
development of the Latin American and Caribbean region. In addition to 
using its own researchers, MIF's methodology uses remittance 
information collected by other researchers. The IDB remittance 
estimates for selected Latin American and Caribbean countries are 
obtained from a combination of sources consisting of estimates from 
selected central banks of recipient member countries judged to have 
reasonable remittance estimates, transaction information from 
remittance transfer companies to selected countries, and information 
obtained from surveys of remittance senders in the United States and 
remittance recipients in Latin American and Caribbean countries. IDB 
officials stated that they compare the remittance estimates that they 
derive from their surveys of remittance recipients in Latin America and 
the Caribbean with the estimates from the central banks of these 
countries. These officials also stated that these surveys have allowed 
them to estimate remittances these countries have received from the 
United States. According to IDB officials, for countries for which they 
have not conducted an in-country survey, they use data collected from 
establishments that facilitate money transfers to each country. These 
officials indicated that data were obtained from a sample of 45 money- 
transfer businesses involving approximately 14 countries. The amount 
and frequency of the average remittance sent by residents from the 
survey countries was used to estimate the total remittance outflow to 
each country, according to IDB officials. They also indicated that MIF 
staff work with the researchers to reconcile the various estimates and 
arrive at country-specific estimates they believe are fairly accurate. 
For a more detailed description of IDB's methodology, see appendix IV. 

The advantage of using this method to estimate remittances is that the 
information is obtained from establishments that have a vested interest 
in maintaining accurate data on the amount and volume of remittances. 
However, estimates relying on reporting of information from remittance 
providers in the formal financial sector--such as money transfer 
operators--cannot account for remittances sent through the informal 
sector (e.g., by couriers or hawalas). In addition, they may not be 
able to distinguish between personal remittances and other types of 
personal business transactions if the money transfer operators and 
banks do not code the remittance transactions correctly. Although the 
consumer surveys IDB used to derive its estimates collect information 
directly from remittance senders and receivers, such surveys are 
difficult to administer because remittance senders may be reluctant to 
participate in the surveys due to language barriers, legal status, and 
lack of experience with institutions that administer surveys. IDB 
officials also stated that surveys only reach individuals with 
telephones. In addition, with these surveys there often is a 
discrepancy between the amount of funds remittance senders claim to 
send and the amount remittance recipients claim to receive. Finally, 
these surveys can be more costly due to the need to hire experienced 
survey firms with bilingual staff. 

Remittance Estimates Made by These Entities Vary: 

The central banks of Mexico and the Philippines, the IDB, and BEA use 
different methodologies to estimate remittances, resulting in a range 
of estimates. For example, in 2003, the Mexican central bank estimated 
that Mexico received about $13.4 billion in remittances from the United 
States and the IDB estimated that Mexico received almost $12.9 billion 
in remittances from the United States. In 2003, BEA estimated the 
amount of remittances from the United States to Mexico at $8.9 
billion.[Footnote 14] In terms of remittances from the United States to 
Latin America and the Caribbean, in 2003, the IDB estimated this to be 
$30.1 billion. Although BEA does not publish remittance estimates by 
region, we aggregated BEA's country-by-country tabulations to estimate 
remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean, and found this to be 
$17.9 billion. 

We found that the reasons for the large discrepancies in the IDB and 
BEA's estimates for Latin America and the Caribbean were primarily due 
to differences in population size, the percentage of persons that 
remit, and the average remittance amount per year each used. Our 
analysis of BEA estimates of remittances from the United States in 2003 
to 21 countries for which IDB also makes estimates show that BEA 
assumes that 54 percent of the foreign born population remits an 
average of $2,076 per year as shown in table 3.[Footnote 15] BEA 
assumes that the percentage of adult foreign born that remit varies by 
duration of stay and the absence or presence of children in the 
household. To determine the $2,076 that is, on average, remitted per 
year, we used information from BEA's underlying tabulations and 
calculated the average remittance per person for the 21 countries. BEA 
assumes that the percent of income remitted varies by the presence or 
absence of children, the type of countries of birth (according to 
economic development), and proximity to the United States. In contrast, 
based on our analysis of IDB's survey results, 70 percent of percent of 
adult foreign-born Hispanics remit and on average, they remit $3,024 
per year, as shown in table 3. 

Table 3: Comparison of BEA and IDB Estimates of Remittances to 21 Latin 
American and Caribbean Countries, 2003: 

Number in the population (in millions). 

Less adjustment to exclude U.S.-born Hispanics who have been found not 
to remit[A] (in millions); 
BEA: 14.7: (Total adult foreign born): NA[B]; 
IDB: 16.7: (Total adult Hispanic population): 2.0. 

Adjusted number of Hispanic foreign-born population; 
BEA: 14.7: (Total adult foreign born): 14.7; 
IDB: 16.7: (Total adult Hispanic population): 14.7. 

Number of Hispanic foreign born who remit; 
BEA: 14.7: (Total adult foreign born): 7.8; 
IDB: 16.7: (Total adult Hispanic population): 10.2. 

Implied percentage of Hispanic foreign born who remit; 
BEA: 14.7: (Total adult foreign born): 54%; 
IDB: 16.7: (Total adult Hispanic population): 70%[C]. 

Average annual remittance sent; 
BEA: 14.7: (Total adult foreign born): $2,076; 
IDB: 16.7: (Total adult Hispanic population): $3,024. 

Total estimated remittances to 21 Latin American and Caribbean 
countries (in billions); 
BEA: 14.7: (Total adult foreign born): $16.3; 
IDB: 16.7: (Total adult Hispanic population): $30.8. 

Source GAO. 

[A] The IDB stated that U.S.-born adult Hispanics do not send 
remittances. 

[B] Not applicable. 

[C] The IDB survey of remitters in the United States found that 61 
percent of all 16.7 million Hispanics (10.2 million) in the United 
States remit funds. However, when the U.S.-born adult Hispanics are 
subtracted from this population--because IDB officials state that they 
do not remit--then 10.2 million of the 14.7 million foreign-born 
Hispanics (70 percent) remit funds to their home countries. 

[End of table] 

BEA Is Involved in International Efforts to Improve the Collection and 
Reporting of Remittance Information: 

BEA is involved in international efforts that began in January 2005 to 
try and improve upon the collection and reporting of remittance data; 
however, it is too early to tell how successful these initiatives will 
be. Currently, remittance data are incomplete and cannot be reconciled 
because of inconsistency in the various institutions' methods of 
collecting and reporting remittance data. Recognizing the importance of 
remittances and the need for improved data, the governments of the G8 
at the Sea Island Summit in 2004 called for the establishment of a 
working group to improve remittance statistics. BEA is an active member 
of an international group supporting this effort, which recommended an 
agreed upon definition of remittances. In June 2006, a new group will 
also start an effort to improve guidance on collecting and reporting 
remittance data. BEA expects to be invited to serve on this group. 

International Estimates of Remittances Are Incomplete and Do Not 
Reconcile: 

The international estimates of remittances vary by the methods used and 
the coverage, quality, and reliability of the data, making comparisons 
of such estimates difficult. In principle, the combined inflows and 
outflows for all countries should equal zero--as the outflows from one 
country or international organization become the inflows of another. 
However, many countries do not provide information on both remittance 
inflows and outflows, resulting in global remittance figures that do 
not reconcile. Figure 4 shows the remittance inflows (credits) and 
outflows (debits) from 1990 through 2003. If global remittance figures 
reconciled, the lines in this figure would be the same. However, as can 
be seen from the figure, while the lines were fairly close prior to 
1998, since then they have diverged with countries showing remittance 
inflows (primarily developing countries) larger than remittance 
outflows (primarily developed countries). 

Figure 4: Differences between Global Remittance Credits and Debits, 
1990-2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The IMF accepts member countries' estimates of remittances at their 
face value because, according to IMF officials, all methods of 
estimating remittances have their weaknesses. According to IMF 
officials, the choice of methodology is primarily related to the 
availability of resources. IMF officials indicated that they were not 
aware of any country that has institutionalized household surveys to 
generate remittance data. Remittance estimates submitted by IMF member 
countries do not reveal the methodologies used for the estimates. 
However, according to IMF officials, most countries report their 
remittances as residuals of existing data; others simply do not report 
remittances. 

International Working Group Was Established in 2005 to Improve 
Remittance Data: 

In 2004, at the annual G8 meeting in Sea Island, Georgia, leaders of 
the G8 countries recognized the important role remittances play and 
called upon international financial institutions such as the World Bank 
and the IMF to lead a global effort to improve remittance statistics. 
As a result, the World Bank, IMF, and the United Nations formed the 
International Working Group on Improving Data on Remittances. This 
group delegated the tasks of clarifying concepts and definitions on 
remittances and addressing compilation issues to other groups. The 
working group met in January 2005 and included BEA and representatives 
from key remittance-sending countries, one key remittance-receiving 
country, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. 

The working group's first objective was to clarify the definition of 
remittances. The group agreed that the United Nations Technical 
Subgroup on the Movement of Natural Persons (TSG), of which BEA is a 
member, should be the forum to discuss improvements in concepts and 
definitions for remittances. The TSG recommended, among other things, 
that the "workers' remittances" item in the balance of payments be 
replaced with a new component called "personal transfers," which would 
include all current transfers (in cash or in kind) sent or received by 
resident households to or from nonresident households. This new 
component would not be based on employment or migration status and 
would resolve the inconsistencies associated with "workers' 
remittances."[Footnote 16] This new definition was discussed at the 
June 2005 meeting of the IMF Committee on Balance of Payments 
Statistics.[Footnote 17] BEA officials stated that they have begun 
using this new definition; however, it will be included in the 
publication of the revised Balance of Payments Manual, which is 
scheduled to be completed in 2008. 

The second objective of the working group was to improve guidance on 
collecting and compiling remittance statistics, including the use of 
household surveys, if needed. The working group agreed that it would be 
useful to form a core group of compilers to review methods and develop 
more detailed guidance for compiling remittances data. Eurostat, the 
statistical office of the European Communities, offered to host the 
first meeting in June 2006 in Luxembourg, thereby creating the 
"Luxembourg Group," which includes the World Bank and IMF's statistics 
department. The Luxembourg Group will review, among other things, the 
extent to which household survey data can be used to improve balance of 
payment statistics. BEA expects to be invited to serve on this group. 
According to the IMF, the prerequisite to the group's success is the 
commitment of national compilers to share their methodologies. The 
progress of this group will be reviewed by the IMF Committee on Balance 
of Payments Statistics, of which BEA is a member. No date has been set 
for this group to complete its work. 

In the meantime, the international working group will coordinate with a 
recent project conducted by the Center for Latin America Monetary 
Studies to improve central bank remittance reporting and procedures. 
This project is supported by the MIF. The final report of the working 
group is to be presented by the end of September 2006, so that initial 
work of the Luxembourg Group can be incorporated. 

Observations: 

In recent years, remittances have received growing attention from 
policy makers because major industrial countries began to understand 
the magnitude and importance of these flows to developing countries. By 
their nature, remittance flows are difficult to measure. Some 
remittances move through informal channels that official data often 
cannot easily or reliably measure. Countries define remittances 
differently and use various methodologies to estimate them; it is 
therefore not surprising that estimates vary widely. 

Although there are international efforts in which BEA participates to 
improve remittance statistics, two issues suggest the challenges facing 
these efforts. First, current remittance data are incomplete globally 
and cannot be easily reconciled because of the inconsistency in the 
methods of collecting and reporting remittance data. Second, for source 
countries, remittances constitute a small share of their overall 
economy--thus there may not be enough incentives for these countries to 
improve their remittance estimates. For recipient countries, 
remittances constitute a larger share of the economy; but these 
countries lack the resources to improve their statistics. International 
efforts to improve remittance statistics have begun recently, and it is 
too soon to tell whether these efforts will improve the accuracy of 
remittance statistics. 

In the United States, remittance estimates are important for agencies 
such as Treasury and the Federal Reserve; more accurate remittance 
estimates could help them better target their financial infrastructure 
and automated-clearinghouse remittances programs. With better data on 
remittances, the U.S. government could make better decisions about how 
much (and what kind) of development assistance to provide, and U.S. 
companies could make better decisions regarding foreign direct 
investment. As remittance flows from the United States continue to 
grow, U.S. policy makers may want to explore options for improving the 
accuracy of U.S. remittance statistics--such as conducting a new survey 
to determine the remitting behavior of U.S. immigrants, or adding 
specific questions to current government surveys to obtain better 
information. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

The Departments of Commerce and the Treasury provided written comments 
on the draft report, which are reproduced in appendixes V and VI, 
respectively. Commerce also provided technical comments, which we 
incorporated into the report as appropriate. 

Treasury concurred with our observations, especially on the need for 
more accurate remittance data to provide policy makers with the 
information necessary to improve their decision-making process. 
Commerce concurred with most of our observations. Specifically, they 
concurred that estimates of remittances from the United States derived 
by BEA and those of foreign governments and international organizations 
differ substantially and that there are several methodological reasons 
for these differences. Commerce also concurred that more accurate 
estimates would enable users of remittance data to make better informed 
decisions. 

Commerce, however, stated its view that BEA's estimates are lower than 
most of the others we discuss because we compare BEA's estimate of 
personal gifts to foreign residents (personal transfers) with much 
broader estimates of remittances, which include compensation paid to 
foreign workers who are temporarily employed in the United States. 
Commerce believes that a substantial portion of the differences between 
BEA's estimates and those of other government or international 
organizations is accounted for by this definitional difference. 
Contrary to Commerce's view, compensation paid to foreign workers 
temporarily employed in the United States was not included in the 
remittances estimates with which we compared BEA's personal transfers 
estimates. We therefore do not believe that the differences among the 
estimates we discuss in our report are due to this definitional 
difference. Commerce further stated that some countries may 
overestimate their receipts of remittances from the United States 
because remittances may be channeled through banks in the United States 
from remitters not living in the United States. Of the countries we 
discuss in this report, we found this only to be true for the 
Philippines and, for this reason, we do not compare BEA's remittances 
estimate to that of the central bank of the Philippines. As we discuss 
in our report, efforts are underway to improve remittance statistics, 
which may help make estimates more comparable in the future. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Department of Commerce, 
Treasury, the Chairman and Ranking Minority Member of the House 
Committee on Financial Services, and other interested congressional 
committees. We will also make copies available to others on request. In 
addition, this report will be available at no cost on our Web site at 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions regarding this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-2717 or [Hyperlink, jonesy@gao.gov]. Contact 
points for our offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs 
may be found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major 
contributions to this report are listed in appendix VII. 

Signed by: 

Yvonne D. Jones: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 

[End of section] 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Our reporting objectives were to examine (1) the methodology the Bureau 
of Economic Analysis (BEA) uses to develop the official U.S. estimates 
on the volume of remittances from the United States, (2) methodologies 
used by other countries and multilateral institutions to estimate 
remittances from the United States, and (3) international efforts to 
improve the collection and reporting of remittance data. 

To understand the methodology BEA used to derive its estimate of 
remittances from the United States, we met several times with BEA 
officials responsible for developing the estimate. They provided us 
with the 2003 estimate on the total volume of remittances from the 
United States to the rest of the world--and explained how they provide 
this number to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)--so that the U.S. 
figures can be presented in the IMF's balance of payments statistics. 
We also obtained documentation describing BEA's methodology before 
2005, including BEA's Survey of Current Business and other written 
documentation. BEA officials provided us with examples of the various 
data used in their model to calculate their remittance estimate. In 
addition, we provided BEA with numerous follow-up questions about their 
methodology, and they provided us with written responses. To understand 
BEA's revised methodology, we obtained relevant documentation from BEA 
and provided follow-up questions to BEA. We also met with the U.S. 
Census Bureau to understand the data underlying BEA's methodology for 
estimating remittances. To understand how we evaluated the statistical 
reliability of BEA's estimate for 2003, see appendix III. We 
interviewed remittance experts from the IMF, World Bank, Inter-American 
Development Bank (IDB), and academia to obtain their views on BEA's 
(and alternative) methodologies. 

To understand the methodologies used by other countries and 
multilateral institutions to estimate U.S. remittances to specific 
countries and regions, we met with officials from the IDB and their 
external consultant, the Asian Development Bank, the African 
Development Bank, as well as the Mexican and Philippine Central Banks. 
The IDB provided remittance estimates from the United States to 
specific countries in Latin America, the Caribbean, and to the region 
as a whole. The Asian and African Development Bank do not provide 
estimates for their respective regions. The Central Bank of Mexico 
provided estimates of remittances received by Mexico from the United 
States, while the Central Bank of the Philippines provided estimates of 
remittances received by the Philippines from the United States. In 
meetings with these entities, we obtained an understanding of the 
methodologies used to estimate remittances, the reasons for using these 
methodologies, and their strengths and potential limitations. We also 
obtained a report that described IDB's methodology. Further, we 
obtained government regulations from Mexico and the Philippines to 
understand what financial institutions are required to report to 
Central Banks so that they can estimate remittances. To compare 
remittance estimates obtained from the Mexican Central Bank and IDB 
with those of BEA, we obtained BEA's 2003 estimates of remittances to 
specific countries. BEA officials cautioned us that the estimates to 
specific countries are less reliable than their overall remittance 
estimate and stated that these numbers should not be considered BEA 
estimates to specific countries. 

Given our understanding that remittance estimates vary for a number of 
reasons and that international efforts are under way to improve 
remittance statistics, it was not possible for us to cross check the 
estimates of remittances from the United States against any accurate 
known amount. Because of this, for the purposes of this report, we 
focused on understanding the methodologies used by BEA, IDB, and the 
Central Banks of Mexico and the Philippines, to estimate remittance 
from the United States. We also focused on understanding the strengths 
and limitations of the methodologies of the BEA and the other entities 
to obtain a better understanding of the reasonableness of their 
approaches to estimating remittances. We presented BEA's estimates and 
the estimates of IDB and the Central Bank of Mexico to show the range 
of estimates generated from different methodologies, rather than as a 
statement of their being precise measurements of remittances. We chose 
not to present the Central Bank of the Philippine's estimate of 
remittances because central bank officials stated that their current 
methodology could not be used to report on remittances solely received 
from the United States. 

To obtain a global perspective on international efforts to improve the 
collection and reporting of remittances, we met with officials from the 
IMF, World Bank, IDB, Asian Development Bank, African Development Bank, 
and experts in the field of remittances. We reviewed IMF documents on 
remittances as they are discussed in the balance of payments framework 
and reviewed IMF balance of payments statistics to get a sense for 
which countries regularly report on remittances. We obtained limited 
documentation (e.g., minutes from meetings) on international efforts to 
improve the collection and reporting of remittances. BEA and the U.S. 
Department of the Treasury (Treasury) also provided us with 
descriptions of these international efforts and identified the U.S. 
government officials that participate in these international bodies. 

Our work was performed in San Francisco, California; and Washington, 
D.C., from December 2004 to March 2006 in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: BEA's Methodology for Estimating Remittances: 

BEA's model to estimate remittances combines data on the number of the 
adult foreign-born population living in the United States, the 
percentage of the adult foreign-born population that remits, the income 
of the adult foreign-born population, and the percentage of income that 
is remitted by the adult foreign-born population.[Footnote 18] BEA 
first multiplies the foreign-born population, arrayed by selected 
demographic characteristics, by the percentage of the foreign-born 
population that remits to obtain the population of remitters. BEA then 
multiplies the average per capita income of the foreign-born population 
by the percentage of income remitted by those who remit to obtain per 
capita remittances. Finally, BEA multiplies per capita remittances by 
the population of remitters to obtain total personal transfers. 

BEA obtains estimates on the adult foreign-born population by place of 
birth and their average income from the American Community Survey 
(ACS), arranged by duration of stay in the United States, gender, and 
presence of children in the household. BEA obtains estimates of the 
percentage of the adult foreign-born population that send remittances 
to their country of origin from various academic studies, in addition 
to the 1989 Legalized Population Survey (LPS1) and the 1992 Legalized 
Population Follow-Up Survey (LPS2); however, the estimates it uses 
cannot be directly tracked to these source documents. BEA obtains these 
proportions by making assumptions based on its judgment. BEA assumes 
that the place of birth of the adult foreign-born population does not 
affect the likelihood of remitting but that it does affect the 
percentage of income remitted. BEA also assumes that, once the presence 
of children in the household and the duration of stay are accounted 
for, men and women are equally likely to remit. In effect, only the 
presence of children in the household and the duration of stay 
determines the percentage of the adult foreign-born population that 
remit to their countries of birth under these assumptions, as shown in 
figure 5. 

Figure 5: BEA Values for the Percentage of the Adult Foreign-Born 
Population in the United States That Send Remittances: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

To determine the percentage of income that the adult foreign-born 
population remits, BEA makes assumptions about the development status 
and proximity of the country of origin of the adult foreign-born 
population, along with the presence of children in the U.S. household. 
BEA groups countries of origin into four categories indicating their 
propensity to send remittances and representing highest-remitting, high-
remitting, medium-remitting, and low-remitting countries of birth. The 
highest-remitting countries are closest to the United States, while 
other developing countries are either high-remitting or middle-
remitting, depending on their development status. Low-remitting 
countries are generally developed economies. Figure 6 shows that the 
percentage of income remitted varies by the presence of children and 
country groupings. Although average incomes are lower for women than 
for men, BEA assumes that the percentage of income remitted does not 
vary by gender. Furthermore, BEA assumes the duration of stay is 
negatively associated with likelihood to remit--but that it has no 
effect on the percentage remitted. Also, BEA assumes that there are no 
variations in the portion remitted for countries designated as low 
remitting. 

Figure 6: Percentage of Income Remitted by Category: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Table 4 shows the application of BEA's methodology in estimating 
remittances from the United States in 2003. As can be seen from table 
4, estimated total remittances are $28 billion. Also, as can be seen in 
table 4, in 2003, the Latin America and Caribbean region was the 
largest recipient region of remittances from the United States. 
Remittances to Asia and Africa represented approximately 24 percent and 
4 percent of the total for the United States, respectively. 

Table 4: Regional and Sub-Regional Remittances in 2003 as Estimated 
Using BEA's Underlying Country-by-Country Tabulations: 

Region or sub-region: Africa; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $1,003. 

Region or sub-region: North Africa; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $236. 

Region or sub-region: Africa (other); 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $768. 

Region or sub-region: Latin America and the Caribbean; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $17,914. 

Region or sub-region: Central America; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $11,487. 

Region or sub-region: Caribbean; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $4,360. 

Region or sub-region: South America; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $2,068. 

Region or sub-region: Europe; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $2,202. 

Region or sub-region: European Union; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $550. 

Region or sub-region: Eastern Europe & Transition Countries; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $1,613. 

Region or sub-region: Europe (other); 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $39. 

Region or sub-region: Asia; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $6,616. 

Region or sub-region: Eastern Asia; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $1,585. 

Region or sub-region: Southern Asia; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $1,613. 

Region or sub-region: South-Eastern Asia; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $3,055. 

Region or sub-region: Near East; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $313. 

Region or sub-region: Asia (other); 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $49. 

Region or sub-region: Oceania; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $103. 

Region or sub-region: Australia & New Zealand; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $26. 

Region or sub-region: Oceania (other); 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $77. 

Region or sub-region: North America; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $194. 

Region or sub-region: Total; 
Estimate of remittances (in millions of U.S. dollars): $28,033. 

Source: GAO calculations using BEA underlying country-by-country 
tabulations. 

Note: BEA officials stated that they would correct the total from $28.2 
billion to $28.033 billion. 

[End of table] 

BEA's Estimate of Remittances Includes Remittances from Some of the 
Foreign Born Who Have Been in the United States for Less Than One Year: 

BEA's revised methodology uses a U.S. residency duration of 0-5 years 
as its first category. This means that it includes both the foreign- 
born population, who are in the United States for less than or equal to 
1 year, and those who are in the United States for more than a year. 
The definition of "remittances" is the portion of income sent as 
remittances by those who have resided in the United States for more 
than one year, thus excluding the foreign-born population residing in 
the United States for less than one year. BEA's estimate of remittances 
is in effect overstated, because it includes the foreign-born 
population that has resided in the United States for less than a year. 
In contrast, "compensation of employees" is the wages and salaries 
earned by individuals in economies other than those in which they are 
residents. As a result, compensation of employees, which applies only 
to individuals away from their place of origin for less than a year, 
may be double counted. Furthermore, the inclusion of the foreign born 
who have resided in the United States for less than one year would 
overstate estimates of total remittances (personal remittances and 
compensation of employees) as some portion of the compensation of 
employees would be double counted. BEA officials stated that their 
objective is to estimate remittances for individuals who have been in 
the United States for more than one year and those who have been in the 
United States for less than a year but intend to stay for more than a 
year. They stated that the ACS surveyed only individuals who indicated 
the United States is their "usual place of residence," which may 
exclude temporary residents, i.e., those who have been in the United 
States for less than a year. 

ACS documents show that individuals are surveyed at their "current 
residence"[Footnote 19] and that one of the goals of the ACS is to 
identify whether individuals are residing at the "current residence" or 
their "usual place of residence." Thus, the ACS does not exclude 
individuals for which the United States is not their "usual place of 
residence." The ACS manual on residency rules states that the term 
"current residence" is unique to the ACS; most other surveys, including 
the decennial census, use "usual residence," as defined as the place 
where a person lives and sleeps most of the time or considers to be his 
or her usual residence. ACS defines current residence as one place of 
residence at any point in time, but this residence does not have to be 
the same place throughout the year. The criteria used to determine a 
person's current residence is based upon a "2-month rule" stating that 
(1) if a person is staying in a sample unit at the time of the survey 
contact and is staying there for more than 2 months, he or she is a 
current resident of the unit; (2) if a person who usually lives in the 
unit is away for more than 2 months at the time of the survey, he or 
she is not a current resident of the unit; and (3) if anyone is staying 
in the unit at the time of contact who has no other place where they 
usually stay longer than 2 months, he or she is a current resident of 
the unit regardless of how long he or she is staying there.[Footnote 
20] 

We recalculated BEA's estimates of 2003 remittances excluding the 
foreign born who have resided in the United States for less than a 
year. This calculation resulted in a reduction of $377 million in BEA's 
2003 estimate for remittances from the United States (see table 5). 

Table 5: Change in the Estimate of Remittances by Excluding Those in 
the United States for Less Than 1 Year: 

Region or sub-region: Africa; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$990; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $13.5; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.3%. 

Region or sub-region: Latin America and the Caribbean; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$17,654; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $260.4; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.5%. 

Region or sub-region: Central America; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$11,293; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $193.6; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.7%. 

Region or sub-region: Caribbean; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$4,320; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $39.8; 
Correction: Percentage change: 0.9%. 

Region or sub-region: South America; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$2,041; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $27.0; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.3%. 

Region or sub-region: Europe; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$2,174; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $28.1; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.3%. 

Region or sub-region: Asia; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$6,549; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $67.1; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.0%. 

Region or sub-region: Oceania; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$100; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $3.2; 
Correction: Percentage change: 3.1%. 

Region or sub-region: North America; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$190; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $4.1; 
Correction: Percentage change: 2.1%. 

Region or sub-region: Total; 
Correction: Corrected estimates for 2003 (millions of U.S. dollars): 
$27,656; 
Correction: (Millions of U.S. dollars): $376.5; 
Correction: Percentage change: 1.3%. 

Source: GAO calculation using information from the 2003 ACS, and BEA 
information on underlying tabulation of personal remittances. 

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Analysis of the Sensitivity of BEA's Estimate to 
Judgmentally Determined Variables on the Remitting Behavior of the 
Foreign Born: 

BEA publishes single-value estimates of remittances to the rest of the 
world by foreign-born U.S. residents. To evaluate the statistical 
reliability of the estimate for 2003, we derived the estimate's 
probable range and its corresponding breakdown into regional estimates. 
To accomplish this, we obtained details of the BEA's underlying 
tabulations of remittances by country. We replicated the BEA 
methodology to obtain BEA's estimate for the world and for each country 
in its underlying tabulation. In particular, we used BEA's underlying 
tabulation and included additional information (e.g., the standard 
deviation and the shape of the distribution of each data series) from 
the sources that BEA primarily used to arrive at its estimate. We 
calculated the respective standard deviations of the values that BEA 
uses for the propensity to remit and the percentage of the foreign born 
that remit. 

BEA uses a variety of sources to estimate the propensity of the foreign 
born to remit and the percentage of the foreign born that remit. 
However, BEA stated that the values chosen cannot be linked to any 
specific source. BEA primarily used the LPS, a survey mandated by the 
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 to estimate the portion of 
income that the foreign born in the United States were likely to remit; 
thus, we also relied on this data. We assumed that the distribution 
around the means of the variables used in the BEA methodology were 
lognormal to satisfy (1) the nonnegativity of the values used and (2) a 
desired bell-shaped distribution for the estimates. We converted the 
BEA estimation process from one that relied solely on the averages of 
the variables underlying the BEA methodology to one that accounts for 
the variation around the mean and its distribution. We used a Monte 
Carlo statistical technique--a technique that repeatedly and randomly 
samples from the underlying data--to obtain a range of possible values 
for each estimate due to the uncertainty in BEA's judgmentally 
determined variables on the foreign born propensities to remit and 
percentage of the foreign born that remit. 

Table 6 shows the regional breakdown of BEA's 2003 estimate and the 
statistically derived range for these estimates. In table 6, we show in 
the column labeled "BEA point estimate"--the regional components of 
BEA's global estimate in 2003--obtained by aggregating the underlying 
country-by-country tabulations. We also show in the following two 
columns the range of estimates obtained by our uncertainty analysis, 
assuming that this uncertainty is only due to BEA's judgmentally 
determined variables. In table 6, BEA reported $28 billion in total 
remittances from the United States for 2003; however, we estimate that 
the range for 90 percent of the remittance estimates from the United 
States would be between $17.3 and $35.9 billion. 

Table 6: Range of Estimates in Regional Breakdown of BEA Estimate of 
Remittances in 2003 (20,000 trials): 

Africa; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $1,003; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $510 - $1,547. 

North Africa; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $236; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $112 - $368. 

Africa (other); 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $768; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $394 - $1,196. 

Latin America and the Caribbean; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $17,914; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $10,020 - $24,842. 

Central America; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $11,487; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $6,233 - $16,611. 

Caribbean; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $4,360; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $2,372 - $5,852. 

South America; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $2,068; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $1,252 - $2,637. 

Europe; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $2,202; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $1,226 - $2,932. 

European Union; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $550; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $242 - $795. 

Eastern Europe & Transition Countries; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $1,613; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $847 - $2,322. 

Europe (other); 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $39; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $19 - $53. 

Asia; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $6,616; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $3,702 - $9,372. 

Eastern Asia; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $1,585; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $907 - $2,154. 

Southern Asia; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $1,613; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $898 - $2,371. 

South-Eastern Asia; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $3,055; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $1,474 - $4,832. 

Near East; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $313; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $170 - $450. 

Asia (other); 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $49; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $23 - $75. 

Oceania; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $103; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $58 - $144. 

Australia & New Zealand; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $26; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $13 - $39. 

Oceania (other); 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $77; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $38 - $118. 

North America; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $194; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $101 - $264. 

Total; 
BEA point estimate (millions of U.S. dollars): $28,033; 
90 percent of range of estimates when the uncertainty is due to BEA 
judgmentally determined variables: $17,265 - $35,909. 

Source: GAO calculations using the underlying tabulations of BEA's 2003 
remittance estimate. 

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding. Uncertainty in BEA 
judgmentally determined variables means uncertainty due to the 
propensity of the foreign born to remit and the percentage of the 
foreign born that remit. BEA relies on estimates of the propensity to 
remit of the foreign born and the percentage of the foreign born that 
remit from a variety of sources, but states that the values chosen 
cannot be linked to any specific source. The 90-percent range excludes 
the highest and lowest 5-percentile of estimates to reduce the effects 
of outliers. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: IDB Remittance Estimation Methodology: 

To estimate remittances from the United States to Latin America in 
2003, the IDB contracted researchers to survey Latin Americans aged 18 
years or older and living in the United States. These researchers 
queried Latin American immigrants living in various states of the 
United States about their remittance experiences. The survey 
interviewed 3,802 households in 37 states and the District of Columbia 
from January through April 2004.[Footnote 21] The survey showed that 61 
percent of Latin Americans send remittances to their countries of 
origin, sending an average of $240 approximately 12.6 times per year. 
IDB extrapolated the results of the survey to the total population of 
adult Latin American immigrants in the United States--estimated at 16.9 
million in 2003--and estimated remittances from the United States to 
Latin America to be $30.1 billion for that year. Figure 7 provides a 
diagram of the methodology IDB used to arrive at the $30.1 billion 
estimate. According to IDB, the estimate captured remittance flows 
through the formal and informal sectors. The IDB also used the survey 
to estimate remittances from each of the 37 states and the District of 
Columbia. To obtain the state-by-state remittance estimates, the IDB 
obtained estimates for the average amount remitted and the number of 
times sent in one year by the Latin American immigrant population in 
each state and the percentage of the Latin American immigrant 
population in each state that sends remittances. 

Figure 7: IDB Methodology for Estimating Remittances from the United 
States to Latin America, 2003: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The IDB remittance estimates for selected Latin American and Caribbean 
countries are obtained from a combination of sources consisting of 
estimates from selected central banks of recipient member countries 
judged to have reasonable remittance estimates, transaction information 
from remittance transfer companies to selected countries, and from 
information obtained from researchers' surveys of remittance senders in 
the United States and remittance recipients in Latin American and 
Caribbean countries. According to IDB officials, for countries where no 
in-country survey has been conducted, data from establishments 
facilitating money transfers to each country was used. These officials 
indicated that data were obtained from a sample of 45 money transfer 
businesses to approximately 14 countries. The amount and frequency of 
the average remittance sent by residents from the survey countries was 
used to estimate the total remittance outflow to each country, 
according to IDB officials. They also indicated that Multilateral 
Investment Fund (MIF) staff work with the researchers to reconcile the 
various estimates and arrive at country-specific estimates. Table 7 
shows the IDB estimate of remittances that 21 Latin American and 
Caribbean countries received in total in 2003, and from the United 
States the same year. 

Table 7: IDB/MIF Estimates of Remittances to Latin American and 
Caribbean Countries, 2003: 

Country: Argentina; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$225; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $180; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Belize; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$73; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $58; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 79%. 

Country: Bolivia; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$340; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $240; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 71%. 

Country: Brazil; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$5,200; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $2,600; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 50%. 

Country: Colombia; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$3,067; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $2,147; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 70%. 

Country: Cost Rica; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$306; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $245; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Dominican Rep; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$2,217; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $1,773; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Ecuador; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$1,656; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $994; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 60%. 

Country: El Salvador; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$2,316; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $2,085; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 90%. 

Country: Guatemala; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$2,106; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $1,685; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Guyana; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$137; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $109; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Haiti; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$977; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $879; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 90%. 

Country: Honduras; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$862; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $775; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 90%. 

Country: Jamaica; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$1,425; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $1,069; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 75%. 

Country: Mexico; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$13,266; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $12,868; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 97%. 

Country: Nicaragua; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$788; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $709; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 90%. 

Country: Panama; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$220; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $176; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Peru; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$1,295; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $777; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 60%. 

Country: Trinidad & Tobago; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$88; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $71; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 81%. 

Country: Uruguay; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$42; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $29; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 69%. 

Country: Venezuela; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$247; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $173; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 70%. 

Country: Sub-Total; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$36,853; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $29,642; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Rest of Latin America and Caribbean countries; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$1,240; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $992; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Country: Latin America and Caribbean Total; 
IDB/MIF estimate for total remittances: (in millions of U.S. dollars): 
$38,093; 
IDB/MIF estimate for remittances from the U.S.: (in millions of U.S. 
dollars): $30,634; 
Remittances from the U.S. as a percentage of the total: 80%. 

Source: IDB/MIF, Sending Money Home: Remittances to Latin America and 
the Caribbean, Washington, D.C.: (May 2004). 

[End of table] 

As indicated earlier, the IDB and BEA used different methodologies to 
estimate remittances, resulting in a range of estimates. While, in most 
cases, BEA provides only a global estimate of remittances and not 
bilateral estimates, BEA provided us with country-by-country 
tabulations that enabled us to construct estimates for the same 21 
countries that IDB provided estimates for in 2003. As shown in table 8, 
IDB and BEA's estimates vary; IDB's estimates in general tend to be 
higher than estimates from BEA's underlying country tables. However, 
for Guyana, Panama, and Trinidad and Tobago, BEA's estimates are 
higher. The last column computes the difference between the estimates 
for each country as a percentage of the average of the 
estimates.[Footnote 22] The average percentage difference is 72 
percent, with a low of 7 percent for Jamaica and a high of 168 percent 
for Brazil. 

Table 8: Percentage Difference between BEA and IDB Estimates of 
Remittances from the United States to Selected Latin American and 
Caribbean Countries, 2003: 

Millions of dollars. 

Argentina; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $180; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $99; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 58%. 

Belize; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $58; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $43; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 30%. 

Bolivia; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $240; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $98; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 84%. 

Brazil; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $2,600; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $223; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 168%. 

Colombia; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $2,147; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $740; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 98%. 

Cost Rica; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $245; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $99; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 85%. 

Dominican Rep; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $1,773; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $700; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 87%. 

Ecuador; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $994; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $478; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 70%. 

El Salvador; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $2,085; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $1,013; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 69%. 

Guatemala; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $1,685; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $611; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 94%. 

Guyana; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $109; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $255; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 80%. 

Haiti; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $879; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $630; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 33%. 

Honduras; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $775; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $308; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 86%. 

Jamaica; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $1,069; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $992; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 7%. 

Mexico; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $12,868; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $8,905; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 36%. 

Nicaragua; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $709; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $290; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 84%. 

Panama; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $176; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $217; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 21%. 

Peru; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $777; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $290; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 91%. 

Trinidad & Tobago; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $71; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $205; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 97%. 

Uruguay; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $29; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $22; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 28%. 

Venezuela; 
IDB estimate of remittances from the U.S.: $173; 
Estimates from BEA underlying country tables: $61; 
Percentage difference between IDB and BEA estimates: 96%. 

Source: GAO analysis of information provided by IDB/MIF and BEA. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Commerce: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE: 
Washington, D.C. 20230: 

March 10, 2006: 

Ms. Yvonne D. Jones, Director: 
Financial Markets and Community Investments: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Jones: 

The U.S. Department of Commerce appreciates the opportunity to comment 
on the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) draft report, 
International Remittances: Different Estimation Methodologies Produce 
Different Results (GAO 06-210). I enclose the Department's comments on 
this report. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Carlos M. Gutierrez: 

Enclosure: 

Comments from the U.S. Department of Commerce: 

Regarding the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) Draft Report 
Entitled International Remittances: Different Estimation Methodologies 
Produce Different Results: 

GAO's draft report compares BEA's estimates of remittances with those 
of foreign governments and international organizations, and observes 
that estimates may differ substantially. It also observes that more 
accurate estimates would enable data users to make better informed 
decisions. We agree with both of these observations. 

The BEA estimates are lower than most others in the GAO report. One 
reason for this difference is that GAO uses BEA's estimate of personal 
gifts to foreign residents and compares it to much broader estimates of 
remittances that include compensation paid to foreign workers who are 
temporarily employed in the United States. A substantial portion of the 
difference between BEA's estimate and those of the other government or 
international organization is accounted for by this definitional 
difference. 

In addition, as GAO correctly explains, there are several 
methodological reasons for differences between estimates. For example, 
some countries base their estimates on information from their banking 
sector, and this may result in an over-estimate of their receipts of 
remittances from the United States, because the United States is an 
international banking center and U.S. correspondent banks are often 
used even if the remitter is not living in or otherwise connected with 
the United States. 

Additional Specific Comments: 

1. Highlights page, 2nd paragraph, last 2 sentences -These sentences 
compare an IDB estimate of remittances from the United States to Latin 
America ($30.6 billion) to BEA data ($17.9 billion). However, these 
estimates differ partly because the IDB estimate includes "net 
compensation" of foreign workers and the BEA estimate does not. Also, 
the IDB's estimates by individual country are substantially derived 
from data reported by central banks and private money transfer 
establishments located in remittance receiving countries. As the GAO 
report notes later, such estimates could be over-stated, partly because 
the United States is an international banking center and U.S. 
correspondent banks are often used even if the remitter is not living 
in or otherwise connected with the United States. If you do not revise 
the report to include BEA's estimates of compensation in the 
comparison, we suggest replacing the last 2 sentence in the 2nd 
paragraph of the Highlights and adding a new concluding sentence, as 
follows: 

"The Inter-American Development Bank used a variety of sources - 
including household interviews of Latin American residents in the 
United States, a survey of Latin American establishments that assist in 
money transfers, and information from central banks - and estimated 
remittances from the United States to Latin America to be $30.6 billion 
in 2003. We aggregated BEA's data to estimate remittances to this 
region to be $17.9 billion. Some reasons for this difference are that 
the BEA estimate is based on a narrower definition, and data provided 
by foreign central banks and financial establishments are sometimes 
overstated (U.S. correspondent banks are often used in transmitting 
funds even if the sender is not living in or otherwise connected with 
the United States)." 

Also in the Highlights section, your chart places Mexico in Central 
America. Both on strict geographic definitions, and on policy grounds 
(SPP), Mexico is part of North America. We suggest GAO revise the chart 
by either including Mexico in the North America bar or creating a 
separate bar for Mexico. 

2. Page 4, 1st full paragraph, 3rd sentence-"we examined (1) the 
methodology that the Bureau of Economic Analysis uses to develop the 
official U.S. estimates of remittances from the United States." To 
develop an estimate that corresponds to GAO's definition of 
remittances, BEA's estimates of personal transfers and compensation of 
employees (i.e., compensation of foreign workers net of their 
expenditures in the United States) should be summed. The exclusion of 
the latter component results in an understatement of BEA's estimate by 
$4 billion in 2003. 

3. Page 4, footnote 2 - this footnote says that GAO uses the term 
remittances "to refer to funds transferred by foreign-born individuals 
to their home countries from the United States." Again, the exclusion 
of BEA's net compensation estimate results in an imperfect comparison. 
BEA has confirmed with Bank of Mexico officials (February 2006) that 
Mexico's estimates of remittances include net compensation of migrant 
Mexican workers in the United States. If BEA's estimate of net 
compensation involving just these migrant Mexican workers ($3.1 billion 
in 2003) were added to BEA's estimates of personal transfers to Mexico, 
the BEA estimate for 2003 would be $12.0 billion, compared with the 
Mexican estimate of $12.9 billion. Nearly four-fifths of the difference 
between the BEA and Mexican estimates would be eliminated with this 
adjustment. 

4. Page 5, top partial paragraph-In the 1st line, we would prefer if 
this said that "..because that is a time period for which BEA has 
statistically reliable data.." (rather than saying that it is "the" 
time period for which BEA has statistically reliable data). 

Same paragraph, last line - it says that the work was conducted from 
January 2005 to March 2006. However, the last paragraph of page 34 says 
that the work began in December 2004. 

5. Page 5, last paragraph, 5th sentence - This sentence says that BEA 
"..revised its estimates back to 1992 using this new approach.." BEA 
revised its estimate of personal transfers back to 1991. 

6. Page 6, top partial paragraph, next-to-last sentence - here, and 
also in appendix III (pages 42-44), GAO says that it used a statistical 
technique "to obtain a range for 90 percent of possible estimates and 
determined that estimated remittances from the United States could 
range in value from $17.3 billion to $35.9 billion." We have the 
following comments. 

The purpose of the Monte Carlo technique was to examine the sensitivity 
of the BEA estimate to the judgments it makes in determining the means 
that are used to compute its estimate. The data that are used in the 
GAO analysis are unclear as are the particulars of the modeling effort. 
The main point seems to be that BEA relies solely on the computed mean 
without considering any variance and that this will be remedied by the 
simulation that is conducted. 

To conduct the simulation, a model of the data generating process must 
be formed. The assumption in appendix III is that the means are 
distributed with a lognormal distribution. The shape of the lognormal 
distribution is crucially dependent on the standard deviation assumed. 
In particular the lognormal may not be symmetric about the mean for 
some values of the standard deviation and in fact can be quite skewed. 
The second paragraph of the appendix does not describe where the 
variances come from and so it is difficult to evaluate the modeled data 
generating process. 

In any case, the last sentence of the appendix leaves one with the 
impression that there is some probability that the BEA estimate could 
have been substantially different and should be accordingly viewed. The 
table below repeats some of the information from Table 6, and computes 
the ratio of the BEA estimate to the mid point of the intervals in the 
fifth column. As shown, the BEA estimate is on average within 3 percent 
of the mid point of the ranges for the listed areas. Assuming that the 
underlying distribution is symmetric, the implication is that there is 
a very small probability that the BEA estimate would be near the end 
points of the intervals, and, therefore, these end points should not be 
viewed as equally plausible or competing estimates. 

Computation of means of intervals. 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of table] 

7. Page 6, top partial paragraph, last sentence; page 19, last 
paragraph; and pages 38-41-GAO highlights a possible double count in 
BEA's estimates throughout the draft report. We have the following 
comments. 

For the purpose of this paper, GAO uses the term remittances to refer 
to BEA's estimate of personal transfers. On the pages cited above, GAO 
states that BEA's estimate of remittances appears to double count 
certain transactions, and it quantifies the amount of the double count 
at $377 million. This leaves the impression that BEA's estimates of 
personal transfers contain a double count of $377 million. However, any 
double count that may exist probably almost entirely involves another 
component of the balance of payments accounts - compensation - that GAO 
does not use in this report. 

If GAO's estimate of the size of the double count is correct, it is a 
small number - less than 2 percent of total personal transfers and only 
about 1 percent of personal remittances (personal transfer plus net 
compensation). Also, BEA believes that the actual double count would 
round to zero percent of remittances if correct concepts and values are 
used (this is discussed later). Our concern is that the GAO report 
devotes several pages of text to this small issue, thereby conveying 
the impression that double counting is a significant concern. 

GAO concludes that a double count exists because the definition of 
remittances that it uses (bottom of page 38/top of page 39) is "..the 
portion of income sent as remittances by those who have resided in the 
United States for more than one year, thus excluding the foreign-born 
population residing in the United States for less than one year. BEA's 
estimate of remittances is in effect overstated because it includes the 
foreign-born population that has resided in the United States for less 
than a year." Similar statements appear on page 19 of the report. 
However, GAO is using an incorrect definition. (We acknowledge that the 
GAO definition is sometimes used as a shortened version of the correct 
definition, but it is not complete.) International compilation manuals 
that the United States and most other countries follow (for example, 
see paragraph 63 of the Balance of Payments Manual) state that a person 
should be considered a resident of the country in which that person is 
living, provided s/he "has already engaged in economic activities and 
transactions on a significant scale in the country for one year or 
more, or if the [person] intends to do so." 

Thus, under international statistical guidelines that BEA follows, 
persons surveyed by the American Community Survey (ACS) who have lived 
in the United States for less than a year should be treated as U.S. 
residents if they intend to remain in the United States for at least a 
year. GAO's blanket rejection of data pertaining to all persons 
resident in the United States for less than 1 year results in rejecting 
too much data. Many persons who report on the ACS in the less-than-I- 
year residency category may plan to remain in the United States for at 
least 1 year. Further, BEA cannot be sure of the direction of overall 
potential bias in the ACS - there could be as many people who ideally 
would be counted as residents on the ACS, but who are not, as those who 
ideally would not be counted as residents, but who are counted. BEA 
does agree that the residency question in the ACS is not "perfect" for 
BEA's statistical purposes, but the problems with the survey appear to 
be quite small, and without carefully examining the responding 
population, it is unclear what adjustment BEA should or might make. 

8. Page 8, 1st full sentence - The UN Technical Subgroup definition is 
not tied to employment or migration status. We suggest rewording this 
sentence as follows: "In the first case, the United Nations Technical 
Subgroup on the Movement of Natural Persons, of which BEA is a member, 
recommended that "personal transfers" be defined to include personal 
transfers by all residents, regardless of whether they are working in 
their current country of residence or migrated to or were born in their 
current country of residence." 

9. Page 8, 2nd full sentence - This is minor, but the reference to 
"taking effect in 2008" may be misleading in that some countries will 
adopt this definition before 2008 and others will never adopt it. You 
may want to consider rewording this sentence as follows: "This 
definition was discussed at a June 2005 meeting of the IMF Balance of 
Payments Committee (of which BEA is a member) and is expected to appear 
in the updated international statistical standards that are scheduled 
to be released in 2008." 

10. Page 11, 1st paragraph - It says that the IMF "generally defines 
international remittances as the portion of the international migrant 
workers' earnings sent back from the country of employment to the 
country of origin." You seem to be giving the IMF's earlier definition 
of worker remittances rather than the definition of remittances that 
the IMF is in the process of adopting (which includes net 
compensation). If so, we suggest rewording this sentence as follows (to 
remove the reference to "migrant workers"): "The IMF definition of 
remittances covers earnings sent by migrants who are employed in new 
economies and considered residents there, back to their countries of 
origin." 

11. Page 11, 2nd paragraph, 1st sentence - Please insert the word "net" 
before the word compensation to reflect the IMF's position. 

12. Page 11, footnote 5 - as noted above, BEA has concerns about the 
comparisons that GAO makes between BEA's estimates and those of other 
organizations. This footnote states that "this report only focuses on 
personal transfers, which we are calling remittances. We did not focus 
on compensation of employees because, other than the technical 
descriptions in the balance of payments accounting, it is not 
separately measurable." However, the methods used to estimate 
remittances by the Mexican Central Bank, the Philippine Central Bank, 
and others cited in the GAO report capture both remittances and 
compensation of employees (net of expenditures in the United States), 
because both would appear as money channeled through banks and money 
transmitters. GAO is correct in noting that the Mexican Central Bank 
and the Philippine Central Bank cannot provide separate estimates of 
personal transfers and compensation of employees. GAO also is correct 
in noting that the household survey-based method of estimating 
remittances (used by the IDB/MIF) did not distinguish between personal 
transfers and compensation of employees. This explains why BEA's 
balance of payments estimates for personal transfers and compensation 
of employees should be summed when comparing BEA's estimates of 
"remittances" with those of these other organizations. 

13. Page 28, 1st full paragraph, 4th sentence - The TSG now recommends 
that personal transfers should also include capital transfers (not just 
current transfers in cash and in kind). 

14. Page 29, last sentence - It says that remittance data "..cannot be 
reconciled because of the inconsistency in the methods of collecting 
and reporting remittance data." We disagree with this assessment, 
because BEA and other compilers often reconcile their data with one 
another. (BEA's reconciliation of U.S.-Canada current account 
transactions is an example where reconciliation occurs annually.) 
However, because reconciliation projects are resource intensive, time 
consuming, and difficult, BEA must pick-and-choose which statistical 
items to reconcile with which trading partners. 

15. Page 33, partial paragraph at top, last sentence - It says that BEA 
"claimed" that its underlying tabulations should not be considered BEA 
estimates for specific countries. The term "claimed" makes it seem like 
BEA's comment could be disputed. A more appropriate way of putting this 
would be to say that "BEA stated" rather than that it claimed. 

16. Page 42, 2nd paragraph - In the 2nd sentence, it would be more 
accurate to say that the values chosen "were linked to a variety of 
different sources" (rather than that they cannot be linked to any 
specific source). In the 3rd and 4th sentences, it says that BEA 
"primarily" used the LPS under its 1992 methodology, whereas it 
"selectively" used the LPS under its 2005 methodology. However, BEA's 
reliance on the LPS was about the same in both periods - BEA used the 
LPS as just one source of information under both methodologies. 

17. Page 48, 2nd sentence - It says that "BEA provided GAO with country 
estimates.." We would prefer if this was reworded as follows: "BEA 
provided GAO with underlying tabulations of data that enabled GAO to 
construct estimates for the same 21 countries for which IDB provided 
estimates in 2003." 

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of Commerce's March 
10, 2006, letter. 

GAO's Comments: 

1. BEA commented on the Highlights page that the IDB estimates differ 
from BEA's estimates because the IDB estimate includes "net 
compensation" of foreign workers and the BEA estimate does not. BEA 
also commented that data provided by foreign central banks and 
financial establishments are sometimes overstated because U.S. 
correspondent banks are used in transmitting funds for senders not 
living in the United States. We disagree with BEA on these points. This 
"net compensation" of foreign workers is a new concept that was just 
proposed by the Technical Subgroup on the Movement of Natural Persons 
(TSG) in June 2005, and we are not aware of any remittances estimates 
for 2003 that use this definition. Further, IDB never stated that any 
of the funds accounted for in their estimates came through U.S. 
correspondent banks for workers who were not located in the United 
States. This was true for the Philippines, which we noted in the 
report. BEA also commented that IDB's estimates are substantially 
derived from data reported from central banks and private money 
transfer establishments. BEA is correct on the latter point and we have 
corrected the Highlights page to be consistent with the letter and 
reflect that IDB uses a variety of sources in making its remittances 
estimates. 

2. BEA suggested that we place Mexico in North America or create a 
separate bar in our graphic in the Highlights page for Mexico. In this 
report, we used the United Nations' Standard Country and Area Codes 
Classification, which places Mexico in Central America. 

3. BEA commented that to develop an estimate that corresponds to our 
definition of remittances, we should have used BEA's estimates of 
personal transfers and compensation of employees, net of their 
expenditures. However, we make it clear in footnote 6 that we are 
focusing only on personal transfers and that we call these remittances 
for the purpose of this report. 

4. BEA states that it has confirmed with the Bank of Mexico that 
Mexico's estimates of remittances include net compensation of migrant 
Mexican workers in the United States. BEA states that if we added BEA's 
net compensation of employees figure to its estimate of personal 
transfers, the two figures for 2003 would be closer. As stated above, 
this new definition was proposed in June 2005, and, to our knowledge, 
the Mexican central bank has not published 2003 figures for "net 
compensation" of employees. The Mexican central bank figures for 2003 
as reported by the IMF in its balance of payments statistics are almost 
$13.4 billion for workers' remittances, which we use in our report, and 
$1.5 billion in compensation of employees. The $12.9 billion estimate 
BEA attributes in its comments to the Mexican central bank is the IDB's 
estimate. 

5. BEA commented that the data used in our analysis of the potential 
effects of BEA's judgmentally determined values in its remittance 
estimating methodology are unclear, as are the particulars of our 
modeling technique. As we stated, we replicated BEA's methodology using 
its underlying tabulation of remittances by country and included 
additional information from the sources that BEA primarily used to 
arrive at its estimate. BEA further stated that there is a very small 
probability that the BEA estimate would be near the end points of the 
intervals and suggested that we use the midpoint of the intervals 
instead. As explained in appendix III, the purpose of our analysis was 
to show the effect of BEA's judgmentally determined values on its 
estimate $28.03 billion in 2003. Using a range illustrates the 
uncertainty in BEA's estimate. BEA also commented on our use of the 
lognormal distribution for the percentage of income remitted and the 
percentage of the adult foreign born population that remit. We chose 
the lognormal distribution because it satisfied the requirements that 
both of these variables were nonnegative and distributed in a bell- 
shaped curve. 

6. BEA commented that we left the impression that BEA's estimates of 
personal transfers contain a double count of $377 million and that any 
double count that may exist probably involves the compensation of 
employees, not the personal transfers account. We modified the text of 
our report to reflect that BEA's personal transfers are therefore 
potentially overstated by up to $377 million because BEA's estimate 
includes remittances sent by some of the foreign born who have been in 
the United States for less than one year. 

7. Commerce reiterated its concerns about our comparison between BEA's 
estimates and those of other organizations. Commerce restated its view 
that the methods used by the Mexican central bank and others capture 
both remittances and compensation of employees and further stated that 
BEA's estimates for personal transfers and compensation of employees 
should be summed when making these comparisons to other organizations. 
However, none of the organizations with which we compare BEA's 
estimates indicated that their methods captured compensation of 
employees, therefore, we believe our comparisons are appropriate. 

8. BEA states that the TSG now recommends that "personal transfers" 
also include capital transfers. This is incorrect. The paper BOPCOM-
05/9 states that the TSG agreed to define "personal transfers" as 
consisting of all current transfers in cash or in kind. 

9. BEA disagreed with our statement that remittance data cannot be 
reconciled and stated that, because reconciliation projects are 
resource intensive and difficult, BEA must choose the statistical items 
it reconciles with which trading partners. We concur that 
reconciliation cannot be done easily. However, our observations were on 
reconciliation of remittance data on a global level, not between 
individual countries, as shown in figure 4. The global discrepancy has 
grown in recent years. 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of the Treasury: 

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY: 
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20220: 

Yvonne D. Jones: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 

MAR 13 2006: 

Dear Ms. Jones: 

The Government Accountability Office is to be commended for examining, 
at the request of the Congress, the important issue of remittance 
statistics. Remittances are increasingly recognized in the policy 
community as a significant international financial flow. Personal 
remittances are now acknowledged to have a positive impact on financial 
stability, and at times of financial crises have contributed to 
cushioning the impact of the crises on the economic well-being of 
households. Furthermore, recent studies, including those by World Bank, 
add to the growing body of evidence that remittances can have a strong 
positive impact on the growth and development of emerging economies. 

The Administration has long underscored the importance of remittances. 
In this regard, the Treasury launched a series of bilateral and 
multilateral initiatives to address the factors that have historically 
contributed to the high cost and inconsistent quality of remittance 
services, as well as the factors that have limited the potential 
positive impact of remittances on development. These initiatives 
include, among others, the APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) 
Finance Ministers' work on remittance systems, the on-going Summit of 
the Americas Remittance Initiative, and our work with Mexico on 
remittances under the Administration's Partnership for Prosperity. 

The 2004 Sea Island Summit, with U.S. leadership, secured the G-8's 
commitment to address key global remittance issues. One of the two 
remittance issues identified for action by the G-8 was the poor quality 
of remittance statistics. The G-8 specifically pledged to work with the 
World Bank and the IMF to enhance global remittance statistics. The 
Bureau of Economic Analysis within the Department of Commerce has been 
a major participant in this global effort. 

The Treasury fully agrees with GAO's conclusion that more accurate 
remittance data are important to provide policy-makers with the 
information necessary to improve the decision process. Such improved 
data would also enhance private sector decision making, better inform 
the activities of non-governmental agencies, especially those involved 
in development assistance, and make a positive contribution to US 
bilateral discussions on financial sector issues. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Mark Sobel: 

Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Monetary and Financial 
Policy: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Yvonne D. Jones (202) 512-2717 or [Hyperlink, jonesy@gao.gov]: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Barbara I. Keller, Assistant 
Director; Gezu Bekele; Tania Calhoun; Lynn Cothern; William R. Chatlos; 
Bruce L. Kutnick; James M. McDermott; Marc M. Molino; José R. Peña; and 
Rachel Seid made key contributions to this report. 

(250220): 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] The G8 is a group of eight countries: Canada, France, Germany, 
Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The G8 
summit brings the heads of state or government of these countries 
together on an annual basis to deal with the major economic and 
political issues facing their domestic societies and the international 
community as a whole. Representatives from the European Union are also 
involved in the meetings. 

[2] In this report, we use "remittances" to refer to funds transferred 
by foreign-born individuals to their home countries from the United 
States. 

[3] GAO, International Remittances: Information on Products, Costs, and 
Consumer Disclosures, GA0-06-204 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 17, 2005). 

[4] We found this number to actually be $28.03 billion, which BEA 
agreed to correct in its next publication to be released in June 2006. 

[5] Formal systems are characterized by participation in the regulated 
financial sector. Such participation means that the institution 
involved in the money transfer is supervised by government agencies and 
laws that determine their creation, characteristics, operations, and 
closure. Formal systems typically include banks, credit unions, money 
transfer operators (including other wire transfer services), and postal 
services. Informal systems include those that operate outside of the 
regulated financial sector, including courier services and hawalas. 
Hawalas are one type of informal value transfer system often used in 
places where formal financial transactions are unavailable, expensive, 
or unreliable. 

[6] This report only focuses on personal transfers, which we are 
calling remittances. We did not focus on compensation of employees 
because that represents labor income and a potential, but not an 
actual, flow of funds sent across a border. 

[7] The Survey of Current Business is the monthly journal of the BEA. 
BEA describes and explains important features of BEA's economic 
accounts in this journal. 

[8] The CPS is a monthly survey of about 50,000 households conducted by 
the Bureau of the Census for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The CPS is 
the primary source of information on the labor force characteristics of 
the U.S. population. 

[9] Pub. L. No. 99-603, 100 Stat. 3359 (1986). 

[10] ACS is a nationwide survey designed to provide indicators of 
communities. It will replace the "decennial long form" in future 
censuses and is a critical element in the Census Bureau's reengineered 
2010 Census. The ACS is conducted every month by mail, telephone, and 
visits from Census Bureau field representatives; it includes 
approximately three million households annually. It is designed to 
provide estimates of demographic, housing, social, and economic 
characteristics every year for all states; as well as for all cities, 
counties, metropolitan areas, and population groups of 65,000 people or 
more. 

[11] See Survey of Current Business, July 2005. 

[12] We also met with the Asian Development Bank and the African 
Development Bank; however, these multilateral institutions did not 
estimate remittances for their respective regions. 

[13] The BSP also reports on two categories of OFWs--those that work 
overseas for more than one year, which they report as workers' 
remittances, and those who work for less than one year overseas, which 
they categorize as "compensation of employees." The BSP officials told 
us they did this to comply with standards set by the IMF for balance of 
payments compilations. 

[14] BEA's estimate for Mexico does not include $6.7 billion in 
compensation of employees for the foreign born from Mexico that were in 
the United States for less than one year in 2003. 

[15] The 21 countries are Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, 
Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, 
Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, 
Trinidad & Tobago, Uruguay, and Venezuela. We calculated the weighted 
average of the percentage of adult foreign-born remitters BEA uses for 
the 21 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. 

[16] The TSG also proposed "net compensation" of employees to be 
compensation paid to persons working abroad for less than one year in 
the host country, less taxes on income, social security contributions, 
and travel and passengers' transportation related to the short-term 
employment. 

[17] The IMF Committee on Balance of Payments Statistics was 
established in 1992 to (1) oversee the implementation of the 
recommendations from other IMF groups investigating the principal 
sources of discrepancy in global balance of payments statistics 
published by the IMF, (2) advise the IMF on methodological and 
compilation issues in the context of balance of payments and 
international investment position statistics, and (3) foster greater 
coordination of data collection among countries. The BEA is a member of 
this committee. 

[18] As indicated earlier, this report only focuses on personal 
transfers, which we are calling remittances. 

[19] See American Community Survey: Field Representative's Manual, U.S. 
Census Bureau, July 2004, Chapter 2. 

[20] ACS residency rules also show that there are only three situations 
when "current residence" is not dictated by the "2-month rule" pre- 
college children away in school (considered residents of their parental 
home), children in joint custody agreements (considered residents of 
whomever they are staying with at the time of survey contact), and 
commuter personnel who stay in a residence close to their work but 
return regularly to another residence, usually to be with family 
(considered to be current residents of the family residence and not the 
work-related residence). 

[21] The margin of error was plus or minus 2 percent, according to IDB. 
The survey did not include remittances to Haiti and the English- 
speaking Caribbean. 

[22] For example, the difference between IDB and BEA remittance 
estimates for Argentina is $81 million. The average remittance estimate 
is (180+99)/2 = $139.5 million. The fraction (81/139.5) is about 58 
percent. 

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