What Happened
- Despite the escalating West Asia conflict — including US-Israel strikes on Iran and retaliatory Iranian attacks — analysts assess that India's remittance inflows from Gulf countries will not face significant near-term decline
- India received a record $135.46 billion in inward remittances in FY 2024-25, a 14% year-on-year increase
- Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries account for approximately 38–40% of India's total remittance inflows, with the UAE (19.2%), Saudi Arabia (6.7%), and Qatar (4.1%) being the top contributors
- Around 10 million Indians are estimated to live and work in the Gulf region, concentrated in construction, healthcare, services, and small businesses
- Experts note that structural factors — long-term labour contracts, diversified Gulf economies, and the essential nature of migrant roles — provide insulation against short-term conflict shocks
- However, a prolonged or widening conflict that disrupts Gulf economies could threaten Indian workers' job security and reduce inflows over time
Static Topic Bridges
Remittances and India's Balance of Payments
India is consistently the world's largest recipient of remittances. Remittance inflows contribute approximately 3–3.5% of India's GDP and are a major stabilising component of the current account. Unlike foreign direct investment (FDI) or portfolio investment, remittances are relatively stable and counter-cyclical — they tend to hold up even during economic downturns in host countries because workers remit more to support families during crises.
- FY25 remittances: $135.46 billion (record high, up 14% YoY)
- Remittances as % of GDP: ~3.5% (World Bank, 2023 data)
- United States has overtaken GCC as India's largest single-country remittance source, with a 27.7% share in FY24
- Regulated under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999, with RBI as the oversight authority
- Channels: Rupee Drawing Arrangement (RDA), Money Transfer Service Scheme (MTSS)
Connection to this news: The resilience argument rests partly on this structural stability — remittances from the Gulf have historically not collapsed even during regional crises, because Indian workers tend to stay employed in essential roles.
Indian Diaspora in the Gulf: Composition and Vulnerability
The Indian diaspora in the Gulf is primarily composed of blue-collar and semi-skilled workers from Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana, with a growing cohort of professionals. The GCC's kafala sponsorship system ties migrant workers to employers, making them simultaneously more stable (sponsors bear legal responsibility) and more vulnerable (limited mobility if sponsors face economic stress).
- Approximately 10 million Indians in GCC nations (UAE ~3.5 million, Saudi Arabia ~2.5 million, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain)
- Gulf economies have diversified with Vision 2030 (Saudi Arabia) and UAE Net Zero 2050 strategies, reducing pure oil-revenue dependence
- Essential service sectors (healthcare, construction, logistics) employ a large share of Indian migrants
- The Ministry of External Affairs' eMigrate system regulates emigration to ECR (Emigration Check Required) countries, which includes all GCC nations
Connection to this news: The resilience of Indian remittances from the Gulf depends on host economies maintaining employment, which Gulf diversification and the essential nature of Indian labour makes more likely even during conflict periods.
India's Foreign Exchange Reserves and Remittances as a Buffer
India's foreign exchange reserves provide a buffer against external shocks. Remittances are a significant component of private transfers in the current account and help finance India's structural current account deficit arising from the merchandise trade gap (particularly oil imports).
- India's forex reserves stood at approximately $630 billion as of early 2026
- India runs a structural merchandise trade deficit largely because of oil imports (~$100–120 billion/year)
- Remittances help partially offset this deficit, alongside IT/software services exports
- A sudden drop in remittances could widen the current account deficit and depreciate the rupee
Connection to this news: The fact that remittances are expected to remain stable is significant for India's macroeconomic management during a period when oil import costs are simultaneously rising due to the West Asia conflict.
Key Facts & Data
- India's FY25 remittances: $135.46 billion (record; World Bank ranks India #1 globally)
- GCC share of India's remittances: ~38–40%
- UAE alone accounts for ~19.2% of total India remittances
- Remittances as % of GDP: ~3.5%
- ~10 million Indians in GCC nations
- US has surpassed GCC as largest source country: 27.7% share in FY24
- FEMA 1999 governs all foreign exchange transactions including remittance inflows
- LNG spot prices rose to ~$25/million BTU amid West Asia conflict (roughly double term contract rates) — contrast: Gulf energy disruption vs. remittance stability
- GCC's non-oil GDP growth has accelerated under Vision 2030 and similar diversification programmes