For women facing the uncertainty of cash remittances or declining income, subsistence production becomes an important safety net. |
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Both countries want the skilled professionals, while migrating professionals may not be as committed to sending remittances. |
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Tourism and family remittances have overtaken traditional exports as the country's prime earners. |
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Migrants who emigrated with their entire immediate families are less likely to send remittances to their remaining extended relatives. |
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As many as 80,000 of Japan's 130,000 foreign entertainers are Filipinos who send crucial remittances to their families at their home country. |
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The country has an unfavorable trade balance, although it is alleviated somewhat by remittances sent by Mozambicans working in South Africa. |
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Its significant sources of revenue are the tourist industry, remittances sent home by Dominicans abroad, and the sugar industry. |
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These networks moved in both directions across the Atlantic, bringing immigrants in and sending remittances home. |
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A newly paved road, financed by remittances, leads to a virtual ghost town where more than half the homes are closed up. |
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Many women send remittances overseas to family and friends, and this further hinders their capacity to assist others financially in Melbourne. |
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However in hard economic times Irish emigrants had sent remittances home to sustain their families in Ireland. |
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Roughly twenty percent of Moldova's population of 4.3 million work abroad and send remittances back home. |
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Overseas remittances from family members in New Caledonia contribute to the basic economy. |
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Prisoners of war shall be permitted to receive remittances of money addressed to them individually or collectively. |
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It was therefore essential to recognize that such remittances were private funds and to promote them. |
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Migrant remittances could be a very important source of foreign exchange enabling countries to make basic imports or repay their external debt. |
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The challenge in this regard is for countries to design policies that help reduce the transaction costs of remittances. |
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One particularly important form of this family solidarity is the cash remittances that migrants send back to their families. |
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With that, remittances by Ghanaians working abroad have become more significant than development aid, which is normally delivered with a lot of conditions attached. |
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As migrant workers, women tend to send a greater proportion of their incomes home as remittances for the benefit of their children. |
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Economies were hit particularly hard by the sharp decline in oil prices and a drying up of workers' remittances and private capital inflows. |
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The counterflow of remittances and information from the United States to Ireland played a vital role in the lives of the Irish at home and abroad. |
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Some 20 per cent of households receive remittances from abroad, which account for 6.2 per cent of personal incomes. |
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It could also facilitate continuous flows of remittances, and incentivize circular migration. |
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Reduce financial costs for migrant workers in sending remittances to their families and communities. |
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With the post-war recovery wearing off, growth was fuelled by foreign aid and remittances as well as by private investment. |
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It was surprising to find, however, that the earliest migrants were both more likely to send remittances and to send higher amounts of remittances. |
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We aim to reduce the impediments that raise the cost of sending remittances. |
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In a statement issued here today, the bank informed that the branch will provide a window to non-resident Indians for sending remittances to their families in India. |
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The country has a severe trade imbalance that is partly compensated for by foreign aid from New Zealand and by remittances sent by islanders living abroad. |
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There is no doubt that a decline in remittances will exacerbate the humanitarian crisis and erode the gains Somalia has made in recent years. |
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This reduces remittances, but they take their international experience, increased business acumen and contacts with them. |
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All remittances except postdated cheques will be deposited immediately upon receipt, without guaranteeing acceptance of order as requested. |
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Hereafter no remittances shall be made for annates or for any other purpose to the court of Rome, the vice legation at Avignon, or to the nunciature at Lucerne. |
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Tajikistan is feeling the consequences of decreasing flow of remittances sent home by people working in Russia and elsewhere. |
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Egyptians leave the country to seek work elsewhere, whence they can send remittances home. |
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Is gender an important determinant in who sends remittances to Cuba? |
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The lari remained fairly stable in 2002 in nominal terms, supported by remittances from abroad. |
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The global downturn threatens the Ugandan financial system, dampens demand for exports and reduces remittances from abroad. |
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In the letters represented here, women were likelier than men to enclose remittances of either money or prepaid passage tickets for other family members. |
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And some remittances are spent on developmentally useful things like education and health. |
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However, the study also found that remittances can be a mixed blessing for the world's developing nations. |
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Other external flows of funds, such as workers' remittances and direct investment, should also contract. |
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We have to remember that the remittances from such people often outweigh the aid which our governments give. |
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Is one of your employees or your accountant in charge of government remittances? |
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Pay your income taxes or make your government remittances to the federal government. |
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The directive should be very strict with regard to remittances, in order to put an end to the present excesses. |
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Somalia has maintained an informal economy, mainly based on livestock, remittances from Somalis working abroad, and telecommunications. |
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For the countries of origin, remittances can help reduce poverty, contribute to closing the trade gap, facilite debt servicing, produce foreign exchange and ease credit constraints. |
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Finally, it puts forth a set of policy recommendations that would facilitate the leveraging of remittances for broader social uses, such as education and health care. |
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American restrictions on travel and remittances to Cuba have added to their sense of desperation. In this section Master tactician or failing bungler? |
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Migration is a means of achieving food security both for migrants, through income-generating activities in the destination country, and for the members of the migrant's household in the country of origin, through remittances. |
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Finally, I should like to point out that in the course of this last year, the size of the very substantial financial flows generated by immigrants' remittances to their home countries has been much in the limelight. |
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However, assistance could be misapplied and was dwarfed by other financing sources, including private investment flow, remittances and private philanthropy, which must be taken into account. |
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Some Niueans living abroad send back remittances. |
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Despite this, the remittances that migrant populations send back to their families can help to reduce poverty in their countries of origin on a micro level. |
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The countries of destination also benefited from the remittances of emigrant workers, for the use of such funds by families for consumption purposes promoted growth and thus higher tax revenues. |
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Issues of citizenship, nationality and identity necessitate some knowledge of emigrant populations as does the increasing awareness of the impact of migrant remittances on the economy of the sending country. |
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As a bank that specialises in remittances, and one of a few that still does business with Somali remittance companies, Merchants Bank of California is considered one of the key links in the chain. |
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Attracting remittance flows into formal channels can strengthen financial systems in developing countries and reduce the risk that remittances will be diverted for illicit purposes. |
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Egypt also has a high level of government debt, and faces a sharp fall in remittances from an estimated 1m Egyptians working in Libya, many of whom are straggling home to swell the ranks of the unemployed. |
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These networks are a major source of foreign direct investments, knowledge and technology transfers, philanthropy and social as well as cultural remittances. |
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The United States had more than doubled its ODA since the Conference, but numerous studies had shown that ODA was dwarfed by other sources, such as private investment flows, remittances and philanthropy. |
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On top of these disasters, remittances from the country's diaspora declined by 35 per cent in the first six months of 2009 due to the global economic recession, reducing a vital source of income for many families. |
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While they're at it, they might also want to cover the resulting loss of proceeds from remittances and the extortive diaspora tax on Eritreans abroad. |
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If your remitter type changes based on our calculations, we will advise you in writing, usually in December, of when we have to receive your remittances for the following year. |
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Diasporas are increasingly recognised as an important potential actor in the development of countries of origin, as already noted in the last section with regard to remittances. |
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With respect to the protective dimension of remittances, most studies, including Orozco's, confirm the importance of coinsurance and risk-spreading functions among recipients. |
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The decrease in cash flow from operating activities primarily reflected cash remittances under the accounts receivable securitization program, partially offset by higher net earnings. |
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For now the economy plods along nourished mainly by remittances. |
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Recent reports indicate that remittances to Haiti began dropping in January 2009 and that they have now dropped by 10 per cent compared to last year. |
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Although Washington lifted restrictions on remittances and travel for Cuban Americans, US citizens still cannot visit the Caribbean island and the trade blockade is still in place. |
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These amounts will be paid to the Consultant who is required to make the appropriate remittances to Canada Revenue Agency and the respective provincial governments. |
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The effects on low income countries are being felt, not mainly through financial markets, but through the volatility of commodity prices, the decline in export volumes and remittances. |
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In addition, remittances which, for many emerging markets, are an important source of revenue, are vulnerable to the downturn in host countries, even though they tend to be a relatively stable source of income. |
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During the course of the past year, the JC was advised by the Trustee that the Province of PEI had failed to make its required remittances to the Trust Fund. |
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The subject of migration and emigrant remittances must also be examined, as there is no doubt that profits acquired through clandestine work and other illegal activities are illegally exported. |
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Foreign remittances from Comorans living abroad in France, Mayotte, and elsewhere remain the most important influx of funds for most Comorans. |
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The economy is heavily reliant upon remittances from overseas Filipinos, which surpass foreign direct investment as a source of foreign currency. |
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Next to petrodollars, the second biggest source of foreign exchange earnings for Nigeria are remittances sent home by Nigerians living abroad. |
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The United States accounts for the largest portion of official remittances, followed by the United Kingdom, Italy, Canada, Spain and France. |
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It is held in Latin America because of remittances and international trade in the region. |
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Research also shows that remittances can lower the risk of civil war in the country of origin. |
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In Saudi Arabia, about half of Indian expatriate workers are from Kerala, and at least half of the total remittances to India from the kingdom is by Keralites. |
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Research also suggests that emigration, remittances and return migration can have a positive impact on political institutions and democratization in the country of origin. |
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The 'Easy NRI Account' has been created with the objective of simplifying regular banking activities along with facilitating remittances for customers. |
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Nauja Kleist, a senior researcher at DIIS, has looked at remittances, which often is a financial resource larger than foreign aid for fragile states. |
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Remittances from the 4.3 million overseas Filipinos and Filipinas, for instance, defray fifty percent of the Philippine trade deficit. |
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Remittances are a large share of the GDP of many developing countries. |
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