Wednesday, 23 November 2011

LEBANON: Connecting Lebanese diaspora with development


BEIRUT: With a diaspora community of millions, and one of the highest remittances rates in the world, Lebanon maintains strong ties to its expats.

Launched in November 2009, Live Lebanon, a one-of-its-kind U.N. Development Program project, has sought to make the most of these links, channeling money from abroad to help development projects in Lebanon.
Fadi Salameh is the Institutional Goodwill Ambassador for UNDP Live Lebanon, representing the project and coordinating with the other ambassadors around the globe, each of whom is responsible for raising funds within their particular community, whether Australia or Brazil, among others.


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PHILIPPINES: The 50-Million O.F.W. Community


MANILA, Philippines — The latest report on remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFW) reflects one of the strongest fundamentals of the Philippine economy, especially amid the global crisis, which has largely been responsible for the double-digit fall in export earnings.
The OFWs' remittances, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), increased by 8.4 percent in September 2011 to $1.74 billion from $1.6 billion in the same month last year on continued strong demand for Filipino workers in various countries. Read more

Nigerians in UK move to boost FDI, remittance


By Clifford Ndujihe
TO improve Foreign Direct Investments, FDI, and remittances from United Kingdom, UK, Nigerian professionals in UK will host a seminar on December 1 to showcase the avalanche of business and investment opportunities in the country.
The seminar, with the theme, Delivering Projects in Complex Environments, is being organised by Nigerian Association of Project Professionals United Kingdom, NAPPUK, in London.
Currently, there are about 150,000 Nigerians in UK. Estimated remittances from Nigerians in the Diaspora stand at $20 billion with the United States accounting for the largest portion of official remittances followed by the UK.
Relatedly, estimated net flow of FDI is about $8 billion. Read more

Saturday, 5 November 2011

PHILIPPINES: Weak options to protect overseas Filipino workers


Government authorities have played down  the negative effect of the ban on the deployment of Filipino workers in 41 countries, saying the  impact “is not going to be very big,” as these countries did not receive too many OFWs.
The Department of Labor and Employment announced on Wednesday that it had issued the ban because these blacklisted countries failed to sign international conventions protecting foreign workers from abuse. Specifically, the DOLE board resolution posted on its website said none of these countries had signed agreements with the Philippines “on the protection of the rights of overseas Filipino workers.”

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Do Remittances Reduce Aid Dependency? IMF, October 2011

Summary: Aid has been for decades an important source of financing for developing countries, but more recently remittance flows have increased rapidly and are beginning to dwarf aid flows. This paper investigates how remittances affect aid flows, and how this relationship varies depending on the channel of transmission from remittances to aid. Buoyant remittances could reduce aid needs when human capital improves and private investment takes off. Absent these, aid flows could still drop as remittances may dampen donors’ incentive to scale up aid. Concurrently, remittances could be positively associated with aid if migrants can influence aid policy in donor countries. Using an instrumental variable approach with panel data for a sample of developing countries from 1975–2005, the baseline results show that remittances actually increase aid dependency. However, a refined model controlling for the channels of transmission from remittances to aid reveals that remittances lead to lower aid dependency when they are invested in human and physical capital rather than consumed.


Source

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PHILIPPINES: World Bank eyes support for OFW program


World Bank Group president Robert B. Zoellick said the multilateral lender was open to providing financial support to the Philippines for an assistance program for overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) affected by unfavorable events offshore.
In a press conference Thursday, Zoellick, who was in Manila for a two-day visit, acknowledged the ill-effects of the weak economies of the United States and the eurozone on migrant workers.
Zoellick said the bank funded similar assistance programs in the past in other countries, and it was willing to do the same for the Philippines.

ETHIOPIA: Migration, Despite the Risks


In Africa, a transit centre in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, is a temporary refuge for young men and women—many of them still boys and girls in their teens—who tried and failed to escape poverty by making a debilitating and dangerous trek by land and sea to Saudi Arabia, their vision of a land of opportunity.
Most of them in the shelter, being fed and given health care while they wait for UNICEF to reconnect them to their Ethiopian families, were found in Yemen and repatriated with the help of the IOM. They share the transit centre with Somalis who have fled their ravaged country.

RUSSIA: Beeline offers online remittances to CIS countries

Russian mobile operator Vimpelcom, working under the Beeline brand, in cooperation with the international transfers system Unistream and the payment system Ruru, is offering online remittance services to the CIS countries. The service is accessible on the Beeline.Money site and offers remittances to Ukraine, Tajikistan, Armenia, Georgia, Moldova and Kyrgyzstan. The operator plans to expand the list of countries. The maximum remittance is RUB 14,000, and the commission fee is 5.95 percent.


Source

Australia commits to cutting remittance costs


Australia is to spend more than £2 million over the next two years to make it cheaper for migrants from developing Commonwealth countries to send money home to their friends and families.

The £2.3 million package, which was revealed on Wednesday, will be used to help boost competition in the remittance service market, and reduce the often extortionate fees which are charged for transferring money abroad.
Money will also be focused on new technologies, including mobile banking services, which will help migrants to send remittances easily and at little expense.

PHILIPPINES: Metrobank partners with Wells Fargo to provide remittance services to Filipinos

(Source: Datamonitor)trackingMetropolitan Bank & Trust Co., or Metrobank, has partnered with Wells Fargo through Uniteller Financial Services, to provide Filipinos a new way in claiming remittances from their families in the US.


According to Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), the Philippines received $18.76 billion of remittances in 2010, 8.2% higher than 2009. More than 40% of these remittances came from the US. Given the statistics, this remittance alliance gives overseas Filipinos, access to over 10,000 locations where they can remit money to the Philippines.

PAKISTAN: Remittances increased due to PRI, claims govt

ISLAMABAD - Secretary Finance Dr Waqar Masood Khan Monday said that foreign remittances had increased due to the government’s plan “Pakistan Remittances Initiative” that provided an opportunity to the Pakistanis living abroad to send their money through regular channel.


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PHILIPPINES: PH urged to bolster ties with Saudi


MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines needs to reinvigorate bilateral ties with Saudi Arabia to maintain its edge over other labor-sending countries.
“At a time when all of these reforms in Saudi Arabia are taking place, we need a more vibrant economic diplomacy to maintain our competitive advantage over other labor-sending countries,” said Susan Ople, head of the Blas F. Ople Policy Center.
Ople said the Philippine government needs to do this, following the Kingdom's new policies aimed at regulating the number of foreign workers and their remittances.

JAMAICA: BOJ Reports Increased Remittance Inflows


KINGSTON — The Bank of Jamaica (BOJ), in its latest report on remittances, said that during the month of August, total remittance inflows were US$174.6 million, an improvement of US$17.8 million or 11.4 per cent over the corresponding period last year.
Net remittances for the month, after accounting for outflows, were US$148.9 million, which represented an improvement of US$15.0 million or 11.2 per cent relative to the corresponding period of 2010.

Mexico logs biggest 12-month gain in remittances since 2006


Mexico received $2.08 billion in remittances last month, up 21.2 percent from September 2010 for the biggest 12-month increase since October 2006, the country's central bank said Tuesday.
In the first nine months of the year, remittances amounted to $17.28 billion, 6.6 percent more than during the same period in 2010.

Remittances are Mexico's No. 2 source of revenue after oil exports and constitute a lifeline for many families.


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Mexico Remittances Rise the Most in 5 Years on Cheaper Peso


Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Mexican remittances rose at the fastest pace in five years in September as immigrant workers took advantage of the peso’s decline to send more money to relatives.
Even as economic growth slowed in the U.S., money sent back to Mexico rose 21 percent to $2.08 billion in September from $1.72 billion in the same month a year earlier, the central bank said today. Remittances had not risen as rapidly since October 2006, when they shot up 24 percent, central bank data show.

Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Pensions, remittances to go online in Karnataka


Thanks to the state government’s IT initiative in governance, all the transactions of the state treasury department will soon go online, ending the delay in getting your pension or salary.
The treasury department on Tuesday signed an MoU with Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) for Khajane II project, in the presence of chief minister DV Sadananda Gowda. Read more

PHILIPPINES: August remittances surged 11% to $1.67b


Remittances from millions of Filipinos working abroad grew in August at the fastest rate in 20 months, giving the economy a needed boost in the second half after a sluggish performance in the first semester.

The Bangko Sentral said remittances in August reached $1.67 billion, up 11.1 percent from $1.503 billion year-on-year. The amount, however, was lower than $1.715 billion recorded in July.
The growth of remittances in August was the fastest rate of increase since inflows grew 11.4 percent year-on-year in December 2009. Read more

Indians send record sums home


Indians living in the Gulf have sent record sums of money home in remittances, taking advantage of the rupee's plummet against the dollar.
Measured against the Reserve Bank of India's reference rate, the rupee fell by nearly 13 per cent from 44 to the dollar on August 1to 49.7 to the dollar on September 23.
The UAE's Indian population alone yielded about US$60 million (Dh220.3m) in August and September, according to data from Indian asset management companies based in UAE. Market observers said the continuing rupee decline had created a good money-making opportunity for many. There are reports that many non-resident Indians (NRIs) have resorted even to borrowing to boost their remittances.

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

BOC accounts for over 47% inward remittances


“Sri Lanka received inward remittances worth $ 4 billion last year and the country has the potential to double the value over the next few years. We now see a trend where the banking system is being used widely to remit money unlike in the past which is a positive sign towards enhancing the remittance volume,” Bank of Ceylon (BOC) Chairman Dr.Gamini Wickramasignhe said.



Dr. Gamini Wickramasignhe
The country will reach $ 4.8 billion foreign remittances by the end of this year. Bank of Ceylon has been able to account for over 47 percent of the entire inward remittances to the country, he said.


“Our target is a ten percent remittance growth from the current Rs 200 billion. If the country could harness its true potential the volume could even be higher,” he said at the launch of NRFC Wasana and Cash Remitts raffle draw 2011 and 2012 and the re-launching of the RKFC Account held on Friday in Colombo.


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Global forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) Civil Society Days 2011


Geneva, 19 September - Preparations for the GFMD Civil Society Days (CSD) (29-30 November) to be held in Geneva, Switzerland are well underway, in the countdown to the 2011 Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD).  Find below some updates on important developments.

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SRI LANKA: Bank of Ceylon launches promotional campaigns targeting inward remittance stakeholders


Oct 17, Colombo: Government-owned major commercial bank in Sri Lanka, Bank of Ceylon (BOC) has launched a monthly raffle draw for the "Beneficiaries" of inward remittances.

The raffle is a part of the "Cash Remits" campaign targeting the beneficiaries of inward remittances. BOC says that the bank will conduct monthly draws and offer cash prices for the winners.

BOC has also re-launched its "NRFC Wasana" campaign targeting the remitters.
Read more

PHILIPPINES: Remittances Increase 6.9% To $13.02 Billion In First 9 Months


MANILA, Philippines — Remittances from overseas Filipinos amounted to $13.02 billion in the first nine months of 2011, up 6.9 percent year-on-year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Monday reported.
Fund transfers through official bank channels and monitored by the BSP totaled $1.67 billion for August alone, up 11.1 percent year-on-year but compared to the previous month or in July, the monthly tally was lower by 2.4 percent. It was the first time remittances climbed at a double-digit pace this year, the central bank said. Read more

GHANA: First African Savings enters agreement with GCB


Accra, Oct. 17, GNA - Clients of First African Savings and Loans Limited (FASL), a money transfer organization, will now be able to send remittances to their dependents in Ghana faster through a partnership it has with the Ghana Commercial Bank Ltd (GCB).

Under the partnership FASL will take advantage of GCB’s nationwide spread of 157 branches and an efficient network to channel remittances from clients in Europe and North America to their beneficiaries in Ghana.

Speaking at a meeting of officials of the two institutions, Mr. Samuel Sarpong, Deputy Managing Director in charge of Operations, GCB, expressed his excitement at having FASL on board and pledged the commitment of the Bank to ensure the best in customer service. Read more

Monday, 17 October 2011

BankMuscat launches remittance service to Philippines

BankMuscat, the leading financial services provider in the Sultanate, and Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation (RCBC) Manila, signed an agreement to launch remittance service to the Philippines.


Sulaiman al Harthy, Group DGM – Consumer Banking, signed the agreement on behalf of BankMuscat and Cynthia P Santos, First Senior Vice-President, signed on behalf of RCBC, in the presence of Philippine embassy officials and prominent community members. To begin with, the new facility will be available at a dedicated remittance centre in Ruwi benefitting the 55,000-strong Filipino community in the Sultanate.

Sulaiman al Harthy said: “As always, BankMuscat takes the lead in offering value added services to customers, including Expat customers, out of which the Filipino community represents the fifth largest customer base of the bank. BankMuscat continuously seeks ways to ensure that our customers receive the best products and service. In view of our ongoing efforts to expanding banking services to customers, especially to meet the increased demand for remittance services, we are launching a dedicated Filipino remittance desk to cater to our customers. The BankMuscat strategy is to attract customers through innovative products and services. The Bank remains focused on providing value added services.” Read more

Kerala needs a new development ‘model’


Ever since the Center for Development Studies in Thiruvananthapuram came out with a study highlighting Kerala’s accomplishments in the areas of its material quality of living, health and education some four decades ago, the phrase “Kerala model” has had a life of its own.
An array of eminent academics and public intellectuals — most notably, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen — have relentlessly sung praise to the “Kerala model,” and encouraged others to adopt it.
“Kerala demonstrates that a low-level economy can create a decent life, abundant in the things — health, education, community — that are most necessary for us all,” American environmentalist Bill McKibben wrote in the 1990s after visiting the state. “Kerala stands out as the Mount Everest of social development; there’s truly no place like it.”

Brac Bank mobile remittance service becomes active

BRAC Bank remittance beneficiaries have begun to receive money from Robi Sheba Points recently at Kaligonj, Gazipur, said a press release.

Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of BRAC Bank Ltd. , Mr.Syed Mahbubur Rahman & Chief Market Officer of Robi, Mr. Bidyut Kumar Basu werepresent at the event where Ms.Rabeya Begum a resident of Kaligonj received her remittance money from Robi Sheba Point.

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

E-payment for Ghanaians in the Diaspora

Ghanaians in the Diaspora are set to benefit from the country's first ever fully electronic payment system in a move to ease bureaucracies and fraudulent activities in both foreign and local business transactions.

The system which takes off this year will be operated by the Omanye E Payment Systems with one of Ghana’s giants in the mobile phone telecommunications providers AIRTEL providing the technical controls. Read more.

Banks embracing India remittances


Banks are wooing expatriate workers in the UAE with deals on remittances, seeking to corner the lucrative market on money transfers.
Standard Chartered announced yesterday that it would waive fees on all online remittances to India until the end of May. The bank is hoping to attract more deposits from the 1.75 million Indian expatriates in the Emirates.  Read more.

LITHUANIA: in 2010 emigrants' remittances equal one quarter of wages bill in Lithuania

In 2010, private persons transferred to Lithuania a record sum of 4.1 billion litas (1.188 billion euros), which equaled nearly one quarter of after-tax wages bill in Lithuania. According to SEB bank's financial analyst Gitanas Nauseda, the remittances from abroad did ease the decline of income and consumption during the financial crisis; however, remittances are a less useful type of revenue to the state's budget than wages.


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Constraints in the UK to Ghana Remittances Market

Over the past decade, remittances have  had a significant impact on the economy  of Ghana.  According to the Bank of  Ghana (BoG), remittances to Ghana  have increased from about $450 million  in 1999 to $1.8 billion in 2009, equivalent  to 11% of GDP and exceeding Official  Development Assistance.  Increasing the
flow of remittances, reducing the cost of  these migrant money transfers and encouraging the flow of more formal remittances holds significant importance for Ghana’s economic development.

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Will recent events in the Middle East Affect Remittance Flows to South Asia?

For countries with substantial numbers of workers in the Middle East, recent events have not only raised concerns for the repatriation and welfare of their citizens, but have also raised fears of a possible slowdown in remittances. Will remittance flows noticeably decrease due to recent events 
in Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia? Read more

Friday, 25 February 2011

PHILIPPINES: Dollar's Fall Rocks Far-Flung Families


MABINI, the Philippines—The world's currencies are gyrating, but the strains are being felt beyond financial capitals and corporate boardrooms. Millions of families in developing countries rely on relatives sending dollars, euros and other weakened currencies from abroad to prop up spending at home.
[REMIT_p1]
Lorena Baquillos's husband, Jimmy, is one of nearly 10 million Filipinos working around the world. She's managed to open a small grocery here on the money Jimmy sends home as a merchant seaman, but his dollar-based pay is translating into fewer pesos at home than it did a few years ago. Read more

PHILIPPINES: Remittances from Libya, Yemen, Bahrain 1.3% of total, says central bank

Money sent home by overseas Filipino workers in strife-torn countries in the Middle East and North Africa is only 1.3 percent to the total remittances last year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said Thursday.

"The potential disruption [of money transfers] is something we can tolerate," BSP Assistant Gov. Cyd Tuano-Amador told reporters. But this disruption could eventually matter if the violence continues in strife-torn Libya, Yemen, and Bahrain, she added.

Remittances grew 8.2 percent to a record $18.76 billion last year, from $17.35 billion in 2009, as 

demand for skilled Filipino workers remains strong, the central bank reported on Feb. 15.


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PHILIPPINES: Harvard prof: PH emigration to slowdown in 30-40 years

Harvard professor Dr. Jeffrey Williamson talked to Business Nightly on Wednesday to talk about 
emigration trends.

He said that every emigrant-sending country has gone through the following stages: rising, leveling, then descending. "I don't expect Philippines to be any different," he said during the interview.

Key driving forces for the eventual easing off include demography and improving job choices at home.
He explained that as young adults emigrate, the number of young adults at home as a share of  the population will be less. "The exit rate will tend to ease off," he said. Read more.

PHILIPPINES: Philippine Peso Gains on Speculation Drop Overdone; Bonds Fall


The Philippine peso rose for the first time in three days as some investors took advantage of declines triggered by unrest in the Middle East to buy the currency. Government bonds fell.
The peso has retreated 0.5 percent since Feb. 18 following a 1.1 percent weekly advance that marked it’s best performance in five months. Today’s rebound was modest because of concern instability in countries including Libya, Egypt and Bahrain will drive up the cost of crude oil imported by the Philippines and curb remittances from Filipinos living in the region, according to Marcelo Ayes, a Manila-based senior vice president at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp.

PAKISTAN: Remittances and hope

A pioneering new study commissioned by the Pakistan government and carried out by the International Organization of Migration, finds that remittances from overseas can quite dramatically change the quality of life for households that receive them, allowing families to pull children out of labour, purchase land or agricultural implements, pay for marriages or put them in savings. The small-scale study looks at 500 households in nine high-migration districts of the country and in Azad Kashmir. Its findings show the average total remittances received per household from the time the migrants went abroad were Rs 1.05 million.  Read more

Wednesday, 9 February 2011

West Asia crisis may slow remittances in near term

Region accounts for 48 per cent of the total inflows into India.

Remittances to India, especially from the West Asian countries, may decelerate in the near-term as the region continues to witness political turmoil following mass uprising against the governments in Tunisia and Egypt.

The Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia, which capsized the local government a few weeks back, saw popular uprising against unemployment and corruption.

This was followed by riots in Egypt, which, according to the United Nations, have left as many as 300 people dead. Protests were also witnessed in Jordan and Yemen. Read more

Remittances from Kenyans in Diaspora rise


Remittances from Kenyans abroad increased minimally last year to stand at Sh51.3 billion, the Central Bank of Kenya has said.
In a year that saw further recovery of the global economy, remittances increased by five per cent from Sh45.6 billion recorded in 2009.
The increase was an indication that leading economies in North America and Europe that account for most of the remittances are back on a strong footing after the global economic crisis, considering that in 2008, money sent back home stood at Sh45.8 billion. Read more

Saturday, 5 February 2011

SOMALIA: Dahabshiil Provides Vital Remittances, Says BBC

LONDON, PRNewswire/ -- By handling remittances from the international Somali diaspora, Dahabshiil provides a vital source of income for African communities and in doing so, has become Africa's largest money transfer company, according to a recent article by the BBC.

In the interview by Zeinab Badawi of the BBC, Dahabshiil's CEO, Abdirashid Duale, speaks about his company's operations in Somaliland and of the difficulties in doing business abroad that arise from the unofficial status of the region, once British-controlled, in North West Somalia.

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Hawala operators expect windfall

DOHA: People running unofficial remittance channels (hawala) between Qatar and Egypt literally anticipate a ‘windfall’ if the demonstrations continue in Egypt as that would aggravate inflation and further weaken the local currency.
The operators ‘hope’ that with rising inflation back home, Egyptian expatriates here would be compelled to remit more funds to their families to help them keep pace with galloping prices.
And since banks and exchange houses remain closed in Egypt, they expect the expatriates here would be forced to use the black market for remittances.
The Qatari Riyal-Egyptian Pound rate, though remained unchanged in the unofficial remittance market here yesterday at 1.9 pounds per riyal—Wednesday’s rate—operators expect a ‘brisk’ business from today. The official riyal-pound rate has also jumped to 1.7 pounds to a riyal, although official remittances continue to be inactive.
Meanwhile, dollars are selling like hot cake in Cairo as foreigners desperate to leave trouble-torn Egypt are willing to cough up any sums in the local currency to grab the greenback. Read more

GUATEMALA: Guatemalan remittances rose 15.1% in January 2011

Guatemala City. Revenues through remittances increased by 15.1 percent in January 2011 compared to the same month in 2010. The Bank of Guatemala revealed yesterday that January 2011 showed revenues of $ 283.3 million. Although this amount is higher than January 2010, when revenues where at U.S. $ 246.1 million, it has not yet reached the levels of 2009, revenues of US $ 290.2 million, or U.S. $ 314.6 million of January 2008. Read more

LATIN AMERICA: New program helps harness the development potential of remittances sent to Latin America.

new program helps harness the development potential of remittances sent to Latin America.

MWHITEFIELD@MIAMIHERALD.COM

Billions of dollars in remittances flow to the families of U.S. workers in Latin America annually and pay for everything from putting food on the table to buying cement blocks to build homes.
But under a new program launched by the U.S. government, the Inter-American Development Bank and banks in Central America, some of that money will be used to spur development in the region.
Consider: In 2009, $50 billion in remittances were sent from the United States to Latin America and the Caribbean. That's five times the amount of development assistance pledged to the region.


Read more: 

Thursday, 3 February 2011

ZIMBABWE: Diaspora remittances up

HARARE - Remittances from Zimbabweans living abroad have increased 32.9 per cent in 2010 to about US$263.3 million, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) has said.

Figures released by the central bank showed that remittances had increased significantly from the US$198.2 million recorded in 2009.

“The growth rates primarily reflected the market’s confidence in the formal channel of remitting free funds,” the central bank said in a recent economic update. “In the outlook, the sector is poised to grow in 2011 due to the broadening of the Bureau De Change operating framework.”

Millions of Zimbabweans now live in neighbouring Botswana and South Africa while others have settled in Europe and the United States. Most left the country over the last decade to escape a biting economic crisis characterised by world record inflation and high unemployment. The vast majority send money back home to support their families. 


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MEXICO: MoneyGram and Visa Extend Remittance Service to World’s Largest Remittances Corridor

MoneyGram International (NYSE:MGI), a leading money transfer services company, and Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) announced today the launch of MoneyGram’s first cash-to-Visa account program for remittances from the United States to Mexico.

The program, which is built off of the success of MoneyGram’s cash-to-Visa service in Guatemala, allows consumers to visit any of the 35,000 MoneyGram locations in the U.S. to quickly and reliably send funds directly to eligible Visa accounts in Mexico. Recipients in Mexico receive the funds directly to their Visa credit, debit, or prepaid accounts, giving them convenient access to their funds through Visa’s global network of millions of merchant acceptance locations and ATMs.


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PAKISTAN: IOM Launches Study on Impact of Remittances on Pakistan's Development

Pakistan - IOM today launched a study investigating the impact of remittance flows from Pakistani migrant workers in Saudi Arabia on their families back home.


The study, commissioned at the request of the government, was funded by IOM's 1035 Facility for member states and targets an area that suffers from a dearth of empirical data.

"The research will help key stakeholders in the government to draft new legislation enhancing the development impact of these remittances on local, regional and national levels in Pakistan. It may also help to improve remittance services for Pakistani workers in Saudi Arabia," says IOM Regional Representative for West and Central Asia Hassan Abdel Moneim Mostafa. Read more

PHILIPPINES: Landbank makes Japan remittances easier

A news service being offered by the LandBank of the Philippines has made it easier for Overseas Filipinos (OFs) and their families to send and receive money in the country.
This, after Landbank inked an agreement with the Japan Post Bank (JPB) at the Philippine Embassy in Tokyo recently.
Under the agreement signed by Landbank and JPB executives, remittance of Japan-based overseas Filipinos as well as other fund transfer to other local banks sent through JPB will be distributed by Landbank. Read morehttp://www.pia.gov.ph/?m=1&t=1&id=14366

VIETNAM: More cash pours in from overseas Vietnamese


HCM CITY — The World Bank predicts inward remittances will increase by more than 6 per cent this year, based on the amount of last year.
Inward remittances to Viet Nam increased strongly in the last decade, from only US$1.2 billion in 1999 to $7.2 billion in 2008.
Last year was the first time in which remittances surpassed $8 billion, a rise of 25.6 per cent over 2009.
The recovery of the world economy as well as better economic growth have opened more business opportunities, with more and more overseas Vietnamese transferring money to invest here.
With a more liberalised remittance policy, including allowing the sending and receiving of US dollars, commercial banks as Sacombank and Vietcombank have taken many measures to attract foreign currencies. Read more