Ranked: The Countries Sending the Most Remittances Abroad

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June 30, 2024 Graphics/Design:

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Ranked: The Countries Sending the Most Remittances Abroad

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We chart the top 10 countries by the most remittances sent, in current U.S. dollars, based on 2022 data from Knomad.

Specifically, these transfer totals shown represent personal remittances, or money sent between residents in one country to another, including personal transfers and compensation for work done abroad. It does not include, and is separate from, foreign investment.

Top 10 Countries by Personal Remittances Sent (2000-2022)

The U.S. has consistently been home to the world’s largest immigrant population (45 million people in 2022), a key reason for topping the ranks of sending money abroad over the last two decades.

As a result, countries with largest diasporas in the U.S.—including Indian, the Philippines, and Mexico—tend to be the biggest recipients of these flows.

Top Countries Sending Money Abroad2000Top Countries Sending Money Abroad (2022)2022 🇺🇸 U.S.$35B🇺🇸 U.S.$82B 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia$15B🇦🇪 UAE$40B 🇦🇪 UAE$14B🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia$39B 🇩🇪 Germany$9B🇨🇭 Switzerland$34B 🇨🇭 Switzerland$6B🇨🇳 China$18B 🇬🇧 UK$5B🇰🇼 Kuwait$18B 🇫🇷 France$5B🇩🇪 Germany$17B 🇰🇷 South Korea$4B🇱🇺 Luxembourg$16B 🇮🇱 Israel$3B🇳🇱 Netherlands$15B 🇱🇺 Luxembourg$3B🇫🇷 France$15B
Note: Figures rounded.

Similarly, immigrants make up nearly 80% of the population in the UAE (ranked #2 with $80 billion sent), the highest proportion of any country in the world.

Setting the countries sending the most money abroad side-by-side with those receiving money from abroad, reveals broad geographic patterns. Advanced economies (in North America and Europe) are the biggest senders to developing economies in Asia and Africa.

Finally, Switzerland, Netherlands, and Luxembourg are considered offshore financial centers and can be used as intermediary stops in the movement of money through the world.

Why are personal remittances important anyway? To start, a staggering one billion people (roughly one out of eight people in the world) depend on money sent back home. In 2022, 200 million migrant workers sent $800 billion to their families in home

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Ranked: Which NFL Team Takes Home the Most Revenue?

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Which NFL Team Takes Home the Most Revenue?

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The NFL generated over $20 billion in revenue last season, surpassing other major sports leagues by a landslide.

The Super Bowl alone drew a record-breaking 123 million viewers, while the season saw a surge in media and sports betting revenue. As a result, each team is taking home more than $400 million in media and sponsorship revenue from the NFL. Notably, multi-year broadcasting deals with ESPN, CBS, NBC, Fox, YouTube, and Amazon, valued at $125 billion, remain the league’s most significant revenue source.

This graphic shows the top NFL teams by revenue, using data from Forbes compiled by JP Morgan Asset Management.

Ranked: The Highest-Earning NFL Teams

Below, we show the revenue of each NFL team over the 2022-2023 season:

NFL TeamRevenue
2022-2023 SeasonValuation5 Year Revenue
Growth (Annualized) Dallas Cowboys$1,140M$9.0B4% Las Vegas Raiders$729M$6.2B15% Los Angeles Rams$686M$6.9B11% New England Patriots$684M$7.0B3% New York Giants$639M$6.8B4% San Francisco 49ers$622M$6.0B5% Houston Texans$605M$5.5B4% Miami Dolphins$600M$5.7B6% Philadelphia Eagles$598M$5.8B4% Green Bay Packers$577M$4.6B5% Denver Broncos$563M$5.1B5% New York Jets$560M$6.1B3% Chicago Bears$556M$6.3B4% Seattle Seahawks$555M$5.0B5% Pittsburgh Steelers$548M$4.6B5% Washington Commanders$545M$6.1B2% Cleveland Browns$545M$4.6B6% Indianapolis Colts$545M$4.4B7% Atlanta Falcons$544M$4.7B4% Baltimore Ravens$544M$4.6B4% Minnesota Vikings$540M$4.7B5% Kansas City Chiefs$540M$4.3B6% New Orleans Saints$533M$4.1B4% Tampa Bay Buccaneers$531M$4.2B6% Carolina Panthers$530M$4.1B5% Los Angeles Chargers$518M$4.2B7% Jacksonville Jaguars$517M$4.0B4% Tennessee Titans$516M$4.4B6% Buffalo Bills$503M$3.7B5% Arizona Cardinals$500M$3.8B5% Cincinnati Bengals$498M$3.5B6% Detroit Lions$495M$3.6B5%

The Dallas Cowboys generated $1.1 billion in revenue, outpacing the second-highest team, the Las Vegas Raiders, by $411 million.

As the most valuable sports franchise worldwide at $9 billion, the Cowboys have firmly cemented this title since overtaking Real Madrid in 2016. In 2023, the Cowboys earned more revenue in sponsorship deals than any

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Philippines courts investors for ‘China-free’ nickel supply chain

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The Philippines is scouting for western investment to further develop its nickel reserves, pitching itself as an alternative to the China-dominated supply chain for the critical battery metal.

The country, which is the world’s second-largest producer of nickel, is seeking a critical minerals agreement with the US and investment from foreign companies to build more refining plants, as it taps into rising concerns over China’s control of the electric vehicle ecosystem.

“There is room now for the Philippines to be a significant player for batteries,” Ceferino S Rodolfo, under-secretary of the Department of Trade and Industry, told the Financial Times in an interview. 

The Philippines’ nickel output is just a fraction of top player Indonesia, where government officials say 90 per cent of the industry is controlled by Chinese companies.

But unease about the concentration of nickel supply in the hands of Indonesia and China — as well as low prices that have curbed output from other producers — have prompted buyers to seek other sources of the commodity, which is also a critical steelmaking ingredient.

The US, UK, Australia, Japan and South Korea are among countries that have shown interest in investing in the Philippine nickel industry, Rodolfo said. But so have Chinese companies. 

“It’s a race between China and the US,” he said, noting that the Philippines had “a really strong argument to go for a non-Chinese investor so that we can be the supplier of non-Indonesian, non-Chinese nickel”.

The Philippines’ push also comes as it seeks to build closer economic ties with the US and its allies amid escalating tensions with Beijing in the South China Sea.

Last week, Chinese coast guard vessels rammed and boxed in Philippine military resupply boats, an incident that left one Philippine soldier severely injured.

The Philippines wants to sign a critical minerals agreement with the US, which would make it eligible for tax credits. It has also asked to join an existing agreement between the US and Japan, Rodolfo said.

But no deal is on the table for now due to US reluctance to sign an agreement in the middle of an election year, officials in Manila said.

The Philippines is also aiming to produce “greener” nickel with the help of investors by using renewable energy to power smelters, Rodolfo said — distinguishing it from Indonesia, which relies on coal-fired power plants extensively,

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