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In this Feb. 24, 2015 photo, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine agents patrol along the Rio Grande on the Texas-Mexico border near Rio Grande City, Texas. AP Photo In this Feb. 24, 2015 photo, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine agents patrol along the Rio Grande on the Texas-Mexico border near Rio Grande City, Texas. AP Photo

In this Feb. 24, 2015 photo, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine agents patrol along the Rio Grande on the Texas-Mexico border near Rio Grande City, Texas. AP Photo

Miriam Valverde
By Miriam Valverde April 11, 2017

Congressman proposes new tax on remittances to pay for Trump's border wall. We checked his numbers

While President Donald Trump maintains that Mexico will pay for a border wall, Republican lawmakers are looking for other ways to help fund the president’s signature campaign promise.

Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., introduced the Border Wall Funding Act of 2017 to levy a 2 percent fee on money sent by individuals in the United States to recipients in nations "south of the U.S. border," funds known as remittances.

"This bill is simple – anyone who sends their money to countries that benefit from our porous borders and illegal immigration should be responsible for providing some of the funds needed to complete the wall," Rogers said in a March 30 press release.

He added some large numbers about remittances to bolster his case.

"Remittances, or wire transfers, are commonly used by illegal immigrants to move money from the U.S. to their home countries," Rogers said. "In 2014, Mexico alone received over $24 billion in remittances sent from the U.S., while other South and Central American countries received over 15 percent of their GDPs in the form of remittances."

Remittances serve as a source of income for migrants’ families who generally use the money to pay for housing, food and other living expenses.

To an extent, Rogers’ two-fold statement is backed by data. The exception is his point about South America — we could not find any countries on that continent with remittances anywhere near 15 percent of GDP.

Money sent to Mexico checks out

Rogers’ bill seeks to tax immigrants living in the United States illegally who send money back to their countries, according to a press release from his office. The text of the bill itself does not explicitly address how people here unlawfully could be targeted.

Experts have told us that while undocumented immigrants do send remittances, it’s hard to determine how much they send, since U.S. citizens and immigrants living here legally also send money.

Mexico receives more money from U.S. residents than does any other nation, by far.

Rogers’ statement about remittances sent to Mexico is based on data from the World Bank. The World Bank has for several years estimated the bilateral flow of remittances from its member countries.

The latest number is actually higher than what Rogers said. Mexico received more than $25.6 billion in remittances from individuals in the United States in 2015, according to the most recent World Bank estimates.

Mexico also topped the list as the country receiving the most remittances from the United States from 2010-15, according to a May 2016 Congressional Research Service report. China came in second and India placed third.

Money sent to South and Central American countries

Rogers claimed that some South and Central American countries receive more than 15 percent of their gross domestic product, or GDP, in the form of remittances.

We asked what countries he had in mind.

A spokesperson pointed to Haiti, a poor island in the Caribbean, as well as Honduras and El Salvador in Central America. (The spokesperson added that Rogers' statement was actually based on 2015 data, not 2014.)

A country’s GDP is an indicator of the health and size of its economy. Comparing remittances to a country’s GDP can be helpful in understanding the economic effects of foreign labor migration and money sent to residents across countries.

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In other words, a large remittance total may be less eye-popping when it’s compared to the broader economy — and vice versa.

"For example, if I tell you that in 2015, Mexico received $26 billion in remittances and Haiti received $2.2 billion, you might think that remittances are far more important to the Mexican economy than they are to Haiti's," said Roy Germano, a New York University professor who has researched migrants’ remittances. "But the fact is, Mexico's economy is much larger than Haiti's (as is its population)."

Remittances to Haiti represent a much greater share of income for the country than they do in Mexico. In 2015, remittances from the United States accounted for more than 15 percent of Haiti’s GDP and about 2.2 percent of Mexico’s GDP.

Small island states or small, impoverished countries are most likely to have shares of remittances at 15 percent or more of GDP, said Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes, professor and chair of the economics department at San Diego State University.

Tajikistan, in Central Asia, has depended on remittances since years-long armed conflict in the 1990s claimed more than 100,000 lives, noted the Congressional Research Service’s report.

Tajikistan topped a CRS list as the country with the greatest percentage of its 2014 GDP in form of remittances (from all places), at nearly 42 percent.

Rogers’ office did not provide any examples of countries from South America with remittances via the United States that amount to more than 15 percent of GDP.

We crunched the numbers for South America and found that none came close to 15 percent.

Here’s a sample:

Percent of Guyana’s GDP in form of remittances? 5.9 percent.

Ecuador: 1.02 percent.

Colombia: 0.5 percent.

Bolivia: 0.4 percent.

Brazil: 0.04 percent

Venezuela: 0.01 percent (based on 2013 GDP/remittances data)

Our ruling

Rogers said, "In 2014, Mexico alone received over $24 billion in remittances sent from the U.S., while other South and Central American countries received over 15 percent of their GDPs in the form of remittances."

Based on World Bank estimates, Mexico did receive more than $24 billion in remittances from the United States in 2015 (the year Rogers meant to use).

Rogers would have been on safer ground in the second part of his statement had he described nations south of the border more generally. According to the latest data, a couple of countries in Central America — El Salvador and Honduras — received at least 15 percent of their GDP from remittances. Haiti, in the Caribbean, also received at least 15 percent.

No country from South America reached that threshold.

We rate Rogers' statement Half True.

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Half True
"In 2014, Mexico alone received over $24 billion in remittances sent from the U.S., while other South and Central American countries received over 15 percent of their (gross domestic product) in the form of remittances."
in a press release
Thursday, March 30, 2017

Our Sources

The World Bank, Migration and Remittances Data

Pew Research Center, Remittance Flows Worldwide in 2015, Aug. 31, 2016

Rep. Mike Rogers’ website, Rogers Introduces Bill to Tax Illegal Immigrants, Help Fund Border Wall, March 30, 2017

BBVA Research, Remittances reached US$24.77 billion in 2015, 4.8% up on the previous year, Feb. 3, 2016

Congressional Research Service, Remittances: Background and Issues for Congress, May 9, 2016

Email exchange, Shea Miller, communications office for Rep. Mike Rogers, April 4, 2017

Email interview, Roy Germano, a New York University professor, April 4, 2017

Email interview, Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes, professor and chair of the economics department at San Diego State University, April 4, 2017

Email interview, Manuel Orozco, Director of Migration, Remittances and Development at Inter-American Dialogue, April 4, 2017

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More by Miriam Valverde

Congressman proposes new tax on remittances to pay for Trump's border wall. We checked his numbers

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