Remittance to Ho
Chi Minh City to top $5.2bn in 2017: cbank
There
has been a steady rise in inward remittances over the final months of 2017
A clerk counts a stack of U.S. dollar banknotes at a
bank in Ho Chi Minh City.
Photo: Tuoi Tre
Ho Chi Minh City is forecast
to receive a total inward remittance of around US$5.2 billion in 2017,
according to reports by the local branch of the State Bank of Vietnam.
This translates to an expected rise
of 4.5 percent from 2016, said Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the
central bank’s Ho Chi Minh City
branch.
As 2017 approaches its end, the flow
of inward remittances to the southern hub has surged roughly 1.5 times
compared to the earlier months of the year, Minh said.
Between January and September, the
city received $375-400 million per month in remittances on average.
This number spiked to $600 million
in October and topped $650 million in November, Minh cited statistics
acquired by the central bank.
Over the January-November period of
2017, a total of $4.55 billion in inward remittance flowed into Ho Chi Minh City.
If the trend is to persist, the city
is expected to receive at least $650 million in remittances in December,
putting the year-end total at around $5.2 billion.
Over 60 percent of Ho Chi Minh
City-bound remittances come from the U.S.,
while Europe is the second-largest source,
at over 19 percent.
According to reports by the local
branch of the State Bank of Vietnam,
72 percent of the remittances were spent on production and ventures, while 22
percent were poured into real estate.
The remaining six percent were used
for personal purposes.
As the State Bank of Vietnam
continues to regulate zero-percent
interest rates on U.S. dollar savings
for both individual and corporate clients as an anti-dollarization effort,
many recipients of remittances now exchange the dollar for the Vietnamese
dong to deposit for better rates, Minh pointed out.
Tuoi
Tre News
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