The Impact of Coronavirus on Foreign Workers

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- As the coronavirus pandemic continues, Bloomberg Opinion will be running a series of features by our columnists that considers the long-term consequences of the crisis. This column is part of a package on immigration. For more, see Bobby Ghosh on the plight of Kerala, Tracy Walsh on preventing coronavirus from decimating refugee camps, Pankaj Mishra on changing global attitudes toward immigration, and the Bloomberg Editorial Board on fixing U.S. immigration policy.

The coronavirus pandemic has been devastating for foreign workers. In many countries, the living conditions of migrant labor have made this cohort especially vulnerable to the pathogen: Even in famously fastidious Singapore, where authorities acted aggressively to contain the outbreak, new cases were emerging from dormitories for migrant workers long after the city-state had eased lockdown restrictions.

To deepen the plight of foreign workers, the economic impact of the pandemic has cost many their jobs, just as travel restrictions have made it hard to go back home. Since lockdowns have closed banks and money-transfer offices, marooned migrants have not been able to send money — remittances — overseas to their families, many of whom are reeling from greater economic hardship and need the money more than ever. Few foreign workers use online banking to remit money. As if that wasn’t bad enough, the prospect of a long global economic slowdown means it may be years before migrants who lost their jobs can find employment again, at home or abroad.

These developments will have enormous repercussions. International remittances are an underappreciated driver of the world economy. They are the main source of income for tens of millions of households; in scores of countries, they make up a large proportion of the national income.

Because of the pandemic, many of those families and countries must now cope with a reduced flow of money from abroad. For those dependent on remittances from the Arabian Gulf, the difficulty is compounded by a global slump in oil and gas prices that is depressing its hydrocarbons-dependent economies.

[See feature on the remittance crisis facing Kerala.]

To gauge the scale of the damage, I spoke with Dilip Ratha, the World Bank’s lead economist for migration and remittances. This is an edited transcript of our conversation:

Bobby Ghosh: What effect is the coronavirus pandemic having on remittance flows around the world?

Dilip Ratha: First, a couple of points to put things in perspective. About a billion people are migrants; 272 million are international migrants, and around 760 million are people who have migrated within their country. South-South migration is larger than South-North migration: Contrary to popular perception, not everybody is going to North America or Europe. In fact, there’s a lot more migration within Africa: 70% of international migration is within Africa.