Return to Story
Tulsa businesses aid in moving money to Mexico
by: LEIGH BELL World Staff Writer
Monday, June 25, 2007
6/25/2007 1:39:32 AM
Immigrants in the United
States, legally and illegally,
sent more than $20 billion to
Mexico last year, international data show.
Some of that money was
transferred through dozens
of agencies around Tulsa.
Throughout the city, but
concentrated on the east
side, are restaurants, markets, jewelry repair shops
and other businesses that
advertise "Envios de dinero
(Send money)."
Most remittances -- payments sent by immigrants to
their native countries -- go
to relatives in their former
hometowns, where wages
are lower and work is less
plentiful.
Critics charge that remittances are one negative result of illegal immigration,
one that steals money away
from the U.S. economy.
Last year, $226 million
was sent from Oklahoma to
Latin American and Caribbean countries, up 45 percent
from $156 million in 2004, according to the Multilateral
Investment Fund, which
promotes economic growth
in those countries.
The fund also reported
that about $23 billion in remittances was sent just to
Mexico from the United
States.
By contrast, the U.S.
gross domestic product is
more than $13 trillion, as calculated by the U.S. Commerce Department's Bureau
of Economic Analysis.
The Federal Reserve System is trying to land a greater share of what it calls the
"rapidly growing U.S.-to-Mexico remittance market"
for U.S. banks and credit
unions with its program Directo a Mexico.
The program, a joint effort
between the Federal Reserve and Banco de Mexico,
is a relatively cheaper way to
wire money between the two
countries.
Only a sliver of remittances are handled by local
banks and credit unions,
however. Roughly 95 percent are conducted by private wire-transfer companies, such as Western Union
and Intermex Wire Transfer
LLC. Local businesses become agents of these companies in order to provide
money-transfer services.
Dudley Gilbert, the legal
counsel of the Oklahoma
Banking Department, said
about 1,500 money-transfer
agents are scattered across
the state. The department
does not track how much
money is sent out of the
state or where it goes.
However, the department did just approve licensing requirements for these agents,
he said, adding that the
rules will go into effect in
August.
Money from Tulsa
Two Tulsa convenience
stores, operating under the
name Perez's Abarrotes Panaderia, transfer between
$80,000 to $100,000 a week.
The bulk of that business
takes place at the store near
21st Street and Garnett Road, where many Hispanics
live, work and shop.
The stores' owner, Wilson
Perez, said most of the money
goes to Mexico.
"People come in religiously
every week," Perez said,
standing behind the counter
of his small store, which sells
everything from jewelry to
baked goods.
The average customer
transfers between $400 and
$500 every week, he said.
Gilbert said state law does
not require identification for
transfers of less than $1,000.
For amounts greater than
that, the U.S. Patriot Act requires the business to report
at least the customer's name,
date of birth, street address
and taxpayer identification,
the Federal Reserve said.
None of this information
verifies that the customer is in
the country legally, however.
This concerns some conservatives who hope to drive out illegal immigrants by limiting
their access to services.
Directo a Mexico has been
criticized because it doesn't
require legal presence in the
United States for a transaction. However, it does follow
federal law on money transfers, said Jean Tate, a spokeswoman for the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
A California lawmaker has
accused the program of "profiteering from illegal immigration."
A spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Carl Rusnok, said the
agency "would not likely target money transfers to find illegal aliens, but instead to
identify, investigate and prosecute criminal activity."
The immigration debate
Remittances are a talking
point regarding the cost of illegal immigration, which is relatively elusive but a key argument in the debate on
immigration reform. Some
lawmakers have said illegal
immigration costs Oklahoma
at least $200 million a year.
Some critics are enraged
that illegal immigrants can receive limited public services
-- such as emergency medical
care and free education from
kindergarten through high
school -- yet send money they
earn in the U.S. to other countries and not the local economy.
"The fact that the money is
going to help someone else in
another country seems very
short-sighted to me," said Carol Helm, the director of Immigration Reform for Oklahoma
Now.
"That's not the American
dream people work for. They
work for what they have here
and pay their own way."
Scott Carter, an associate
professor of economics at the
University of Tulsa, said that
immigrants sending money
home is no different than U.S.
citizens putting cash into retirement funds and savings accounts instead of investing it.
"To scapegoat the immigrants and say they are working and saving their money
just to send it back to Mexico
is wrong. It's just wrong," he
said.
What people overlook, he
said, is the great contribution
that immigrants make to the
local economy in the way of
job productivity and purchases.
"All of that activity has a direct impact on the domestic
product in the state and the
country," he said.
It's a business
Tate of the Federal Reserve
said about 170 U.S. institutions
have signed on to Directo a Mexico. She listed only one
participating institution in the
Tulsa area, OK Members First
Federal Credit Union.
The credit union's director
of member services, Debra
Nicholas, said one woman
sends $100 every other week
to Mexico through the service,
but she's it, despite the credit
union's cheaper fees and bilingual services.
"Since we were in this area
(near 31st Street and Garnett
Road) with a large number of
Hispanic people, we thought
we could probably serve them,
but it really hasn't panned out
well," she said.
That's not the case with
some private wire-transfer
companies, however.
Western Union handed 147
million consumer-to-consumer
money transfers worldwide
last year, the company said by
e-mail. It did not give dollar
amounts. Western Union operates in eight of the 10 largest
supermarket chains in the
United States.
Intermex Wire Transfers
has about 4,000 agencies
across the country, including
15 in the Tulsa area, that facilitate the transfer of millions of
dollars out of the country, said
Randy Ostler, the company's
chief information officer.
Leigh Bell 581-8465
leigh.bell@tulsaworld.com
Copyright © 2010, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved
Return to Story
|