10:56 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|Money · Comments Off
19 Oct 2006
According to an article in today’s New York Times, not only are immigrants (regardless of status) sending more money back to their Latin American homelands, but the money s being sent from more areas of the U.S. than in years past.
“Twenty years ago the money was coming from four or five states; now it’s coming from every corner of the country,” said Sergio Bendixen, a Miami pollster who surveyed some 2,500 immigrants, legal and illegal, for the survey on which the report was based.
According to some the amount sent back to Latin America is expected to reach the $45 billion mark, more than half of what was sent only two years ago. The article also goes into a little bit of the cultural significance of the remesas, citing how not sending money back is a sign of being a “bad” family member.
Via / The New York Times (Registration required)
9:18 am By Maegan La Mala · El Salvador|mexico|Money · Comments Off
20 Mar 2006
Every day immigrants send millions of dollars back home, to where they came from and families they left behind. In the words of Martha Stewart, it’s a good thing. Or is it? An article posted today at AlterNet calls takes a really interesting look at some of the negative consequences of remesas. For example is the dinero that is being sent back home and being pooled to provide infrastructure development letting foreign governments off the hook from providing services they are responsible for providing like clean water? On a more global scale, do so called First World governments like the U.S. take into account the amount of money being sent back home when developing foreign aid packages? This article takes the issue to a different level I know I personally never have reached when passing the countless money transfer locations here in New York City.
Via/ AlterNet
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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