When international migrants, primarily workers, send money to their family members in their home countries, these transfers are known as remittances.
The main recipient countries include India (12.6% of the total sent), Mexico (7.5%), China (6.4%), and the Philippines (4.8%). The largest source of remittances is the United States, with more than 25% of all transfers; Saudi Arabia is second with 6.6%.
Remittances from the U.S. to Mexico reached a record $55.9 billion in 2022. These transfers accounted for 95 percent of Mexico’s total remittances of $58.5 billion. Mexican migrants, who number 11 million in the U.S., typically send the funds home to support their families. The average monthly remittance to Mexico was $390 in 2022.
god, i never really thought much about it, but with the juice at 2% WU makes fuckin’ bank off of migrant workers. i’m probably slow to the table on this (meaning i bet its happening), but a high value service an undocumented worker organization could provide as an inducement to join the union would be to provide money wiring services at a cost-plus fee in lieu of union dues. the workers would get a much lower rate, a “free” union, and in no time that union would have a war chest for legal services, health savings accounts, work stoppages, maybe even pensions and a probably large network of community credit unions happy to get their little taste.
god, i never really thought much about it, but with the juice at 2% WU makes fuckin’ bank off of migrant workers. i’m probably slow to the table on this (meaning i bet its happening), but a high value service an undocumented worker organization could provide as an inducement to join the union would be to provide money wiring services at a cost-plus fee in lieu of union dues. the workers would get a much lower rate, a “free” union, and in no time that union would have a war chest for legal services, health savings accounts, work stoppages, maybe even pensions and a probably large network of community credit unions happy to get their little taste.