Audio By Carbonatix
Despite the impact of covid-19 on global economies, remittances to Ghana shot up by 5% to US$3.6 billion last year, according to World Bank’s 2021 Migration and Development report.
With the exception of Nigeria where there was a significant decline in remittances, foreign inflows to Africa went up by 2.3%.
According to the report, Ghana was ranked second behind Africa’s most populous nation, benefiting significantly from remittance flows last year.
“Remittance flows to the region were estimated to have declined by 12.5% in 2020. The decline was almost entirely due to a 27.7% decline in remittance flows to Nigeria, which alone accounted for over 40% of remittance flows to the region.”
“Excluding Nigeria, remittance flows to Sub-Saharan African increased by 2.3 percent, demonstrating resilience at a time of crisis. Indeed, strong remittance growth was reported in Zambia (37%), Mozambique (16%), Kenya (9%), and Ghana (5%)”, the report added.
There are hundreds of thousands of Ghanaians residing in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany and France who remit funds regularly to their families, love ones and relations in the country.
During the covid-19 pandemic, where most of these economies were lockdown for greater periods of months, Ghanaians in the diaspora were not perturbed, but continued to send monies to their families and friends back home in Ghana.
Importantly, the country benefited from the remittance flows as its contribution to Gross Domestic Product was reasonable.
Banks were also not left out as their commissions from the remittances were expected to have gone up.
Nonetheless, the report said remittance flows to the region were affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, in particular by restricted mobility measures and the employment situation in the main host countries. Ghana was however not much affected as remittances to urban and rural areas went up slightly.
Top remittance recipients in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2020 (US$)
| Nigeria | 17.2bn |
| Ghana | 3.6bn |
| Kenya | 3.1bn |
| Senegal | 2.6bn |
| DR Congo | 1.9bn |
| Somalia | 1.7bn |
| South Sudan | 1.2bn |
| Zimbabwe | 1.2bn |
| Uganda | 1.1bn |
| Mali | 1.0bn |
Latest Stories
-
GTEC flags 70 unrecognised institutions
2 minutes -
Let there be light: Jubilation in Wa West as Tindoma and Welteng communities are connected to national grid
6 minutes -
Health Ministry, Parliament and UNPA wage war against silent epidemic of obstetric fistula
9 minutes -
Nigeria police warn against reprisal attacks against South Africans
11 minutes -
Thousands of depositors locked out as Equity Savings and Loans faces collapse
20 minutes -
Diplomacy must deliver real-time results — Ablakwa
26 minutes -
WAFCON 2026: Black Queens pull out of preparatory three-nation tournament
26 minutes -
UK wins court case over collapsed Rwanda asylum deal
33 minutes -
France seized sanctioned Russian oil tanker with UK help, Macron says
34 minutes -
Dr. Alexander Quaicoe writes: Technical brief on Ghana Free Zones Programme; evidence from a PhD research
37 minutes -
Avoid non-essential travel to South Africa over xenophobic attacks – Gov’t tells Ghanaians
1 hour -
AMA hands over 8 basic school facilities for major renovation
1 hour -
Chief of Staff urges businesses to prioritise social impact over profit
1 hour -
COCOBOD to issue commercial papers to raise $1bn for cocoa purchases next season – Dr. Ato Forson
1 hour -
Dark Village: Skepticism grows in Atwima Mponua as stalled electrification project in ten communities misses April deadline
1 hour