Claudia Sheinbaum Denounces Proposed US Remittance Tax as ‘Unacceptable’
Al Jazeera, May 15, 2025
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has denounced a provision in a tax bill being considered in the United States Congress that would impose duties on remittances — a term used to describe the money people send abroad for non-commercial reasons, often as gifts to family and loved ones.
On Thursday, during her morning news conference, Sheinbaum addressed the tax bill directly, calling the remittances proposal “a measure that is unacceptable”.
“It would result in double taxation, since Mexicans living in the United States already pay taxes,” she said.
She added that her government was reaching out to other countries with large immigrant populations to voice concern about the US proposition.
“This will not just affect Mexico,” she said. “It will also affect many other countries and many other Latin American countries.”
According to World Bank data from 2024, India is the top recipient of international remittances, with $129bn coming from abroad, followed by Mexico with more than $68bn.
In Mexico, in particular, experts estimate that remittances make up close to 4 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
But a far-reaching tax bill championed by US President Donald Trump includes language that would impose a 5-percent excise tax on remittances sent specifically by non-citizens, including visa holders and permanent residents.
That bill would affect nearly 40 million people living in the country. US citizens, however, would be exempt from the remittance tax.
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Proponents of that platform say taxing remittances would serve as clear deterrence to immigrants who come to the US looking for better economic opportunities for themselves and any loved ones they hope to support back home.
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Under the bill being weighed in the House of Representatives, the 5-percent tax would be paid by the sender and collected by “remittance transfer providers”, who would then send that money to the US Treasury.
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