TODAY'S BUSINESS HEADLINES

NorthWind defers 2 new wind farms on delays in transmission lines

PAL mulls leasing out new planes if Philippines fails to bag aviation rating upgrade

MINDANAO POWER CRISIS | Alsons sets $1.35-billion 5-year capex for new power plants

EXCLUSIVE | After Air Asia buys into Zest Air, both may face penalty for premature joint marketing

Stock market seen to consolidate this week

Migrant remittances resist crisis - World Bank

Filipino workers in Hong Kong. AFP FILE PHOTO

InterAksyon.com means BUSINESS

WASHINGTON DC - Cash remittances sent home by migrants, a major part of developing world revenue, have grown faster than expected despite the world financial crisis, the World Bank said Tuesday.

In an update to its annual report on remittance flows, the development lender said recorded transfers increased by 12.1 percent last year to $372 billion and are expected to hit $467 billion by 2014.

The report said the growth of remittances had helped developing countries weather the global financial storm but warned that several factors could combine to slow the growth in such transfers in future years.

"Persistent unemployment in Europe and the US is affecting employment prospects of existing migrants and hardening political attitudes toward new immigration," the report said.

"There are risks that if the European crisis deepens, immigration controls in these countries could become even tighter. Volatile exchange rates and uncertainty about the direction of oil prices also present further risks."

The countries receiving the largest sums in remittances from migrants are the developing world's giants India, China, and Mexico, but those most reliant on them are more marginal economies.

The former Soviet central Asian republic of Tajikistan, for example, relies on migrants for almost a third of it GDP, just ahead of the landlocked southern African kingdom of Lesotho. The Philippines has a 10th of its population working outside the country. Last year, they remitted about $14 billion back to their families in the Philippines.

 

InterAksyon.com means BUSINESS

BUSINESS NEWS  
OTHER BUSINESS STORIES  
OTHER SPECIAL FEATURES STORIES  
OTHER WORLD STORIES  
OTHER NATIONAL STORIES  

Business NorthWind defers 2 new wind farms on delays in transmission lines
Business PAL mulls leasing out new planes if Philippines fails to bag aviation rating upgrade
Business MINDANAO POWER CRISIS | Alsons sets $1.35-billion 5-year capex for new power plants
Business EXCLUSIVE | After Air Asia buys into Zest Air, both may face penalty for premature joint marketing
Business Stock market seen to consolidate this week
Business Philippine banks run by 'lazy brokers', Monetary Board member says
Business Philippines may no longer have best-performing market in 2H, Goldman Sachs says
Business VP Binay, Finance chief at loggerheads over proposed removal of tax perks for mass housing
Business Sarah Jessica Parker inaugurated 'illegally' built SM mall, BCDA says
National | Business EXCLUSIVE | Zest Air suspends flights to Taiwan
Business Lamborghini-driving Ayala Alabang resident sued for tax evasion
Business PAL imposes fine on late passengers, cuts baggage allowance
Business MINDANAO PEACE DIVIDEND | Thai palm oil factory to rise in North Cotabato