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Subject:
From:
Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 10 Nov 2010 15:42:42 -0500
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Yes Kukeh I understand the correlation between higher education and earning power. What I did not get is how that translates to higher amounts of remittaces back to Gambia. You are aware that in the US, the more you earn, the more liabilities you have not to mention a growing family as you grow in the US.

I do understand what you're saying but when you said to increase the number of post-secondary educated in order to have a larger share of the billions in remittances back home is where you lost me.

Thanx for nothing Kukeh. I still love you men.

Haruna.
 

 


 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Malanding Jaiteh <[log in to unmask]>
To: GAMBIA-L <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wed, Nov 10, 2010 3:26 pm
Subject: Re: The Gambian emigre


            At least in the USA level of education is closely related to earning    power. An immigrant couple with 4 degree between them has a greater    chance of not only permanent employment/residency, but ability to    earn more than those without a college degree. One reason why    Chinese/Indian/Philippino immigrants fare better than Gambian/West    African ones. 
    
    Malanding Jaiteh
    
    On 11/10/2010 2:44 PM, Haruna Darbo wrote:    
Thanx for sharing this valuable          information Kukeh.
          
          You got me a little confused when you suggested a direct          correlation between post-secondary education and volume of          remittances sent back??? If anything, the great number of          Gambians sending remittances home represents an ominous          statistic. Help me understand your context.
          
          Haruna. You keep going to sleep on us only to resurface with          these confusing analyses. 
          
 
          
          
 
          
-----Original Message-----
            From: Malanding Jaiteh <[log in to unmask]>
            To: GAMBIA-L <[log in to unmask]>
            Sent: Wed, Nov 10, 2010 1:19 pm
            Subject: The Gambian emigre
            
            
               I doubt if the 63% amounts to much if the percentage of              Gambians with University education is still in single              digits.  The big question is what proportion of the 65,000              Gambians living abroad have post-secondary education? And              how can we boost this proportion in order to capture a              larger proportion of the $25billion pie predicted for post              2012?
              
              Malanding
              
              Courtesy of The Point Newspaper:              http://thepoint.gm/africa/gambia/article/gambia-has-2nd-largest-rate-of-skilled-emigration-in-africa
              
              
              
Gambia has ‘2nd largest rate of skilled emigration in                Africa’
                             
   africa » gambia
              
                
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
                
                  
A                      World Bank report released Monday on remittances                      sent by migrants to their families in sub-Saharan                      Africa titled “Remittances and Migration Factbook                      2010” has ranked Gambia as the country with the                      second largest rate of skilled emigration in                      Africa.
                  
The                      report, which is the second edition of an initial                      volume issued in 2008 that relies on data publicly                      available from reliable sources, shows that                      remittances to Gambia will reach an estimated                      US$61 million in 2010, up from US$60 million the                      previous year. 
                  
“As a                      share of GDP, remittance inflows amounted to 8                      percent of the country’s GDP in 2009,” the report                      stated, which also ranked the Gambia among the top                      recipients of remittances as a share of GDP                      indicated.
                  
The                      report, which tracks documented private transfers                      of funds and migratory patterns around the world,                      estimates that nearly 22 million Sub-Saharan                      Africans have left the continent. 
                  
It                      said Africa also has a higher intra-regional                      migration rate than the rest of the developing                      world, with three out of four African migrants                      living in another country in Sub-Saharan Africa.
                  
The                      World Bank report revealed that nationals who                      attended university and have left their country                      the most are from Cape Verde (68 percent), Gambia                      (63 percent), Mauritius (56 percent), Seychelles                      (56 percent), Sierra Leone (53 percent), Ghana (47                      percent), Mozambique (45 percent), Liberia (45                      percent), Kenya (38 percent), and Uganda (36                      percent).
                  
“Africa’s                      most dynamic migration corridors are Burkina                      Faso–Côte d’Ivoire (1.3 million migrants),                      Zimbabwe–South Africa (0.9 million), and Côte                      d’Ivoire–Burkina Faso (0.8 million). Others                      include Uganda–Kenya, Eritrea–Sudan,                      Mozambique–South Africa, Mali–Côte d’Ivoire, the                      Democratic Republic of Congo–Rwanda, Lesotho–South                      Africa, and Eritrea–Ethiopia,” the report stated.
                  
According                      to the report, nearly 65,000 Gambians are living                      outside their country in 2010. “Gambia has the                      second largest rate of skilled emigration in                      Africa, with 63 percent of its tertiary- educated                      population living outside the country as of 2000.                    
                  
The                      top destination countries for migrants from Gambia                      are Spain, the United States, Nigeria, Senegal,                      the United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden, Sierra Leone,                      Norway, and France,” the report said. 
                  
The                      report further stated: “It is estimated that over                      290,000 non-Gambians are living in the country in                      2010, primarily migrants from Senegal, Guinea,                      Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Mauritania, and Sierra                      Leone.”
                  
The                      World Bank publication also revealed that                      remittance flows to Sub-Saharan Africa will reach                      US$21.5 billion this year after a small decrease                      in 2009 due to the global financial crisis.
                  
The                      report shows that Africa-bound flows fell by about                      four percent between 2008 and 2009, marking the                      first decrease since 1995. 
                  
“We                      estimate that recovery will continue over the next                      two years, with remittance flows to the continent                      possibly reaching about US$24 billion by 2012,”                      said Dilip Ratha, manager of the Migration and                      Remittances unit at the World Bank.
                  
Ratha                      cautions that these numbers are gross                      underestimates, because millions of Africans rely                      on informal channels to send money home. 
                  
Worldwide,                      remittance flows are expected to reach US$440                      billion by end-2010, up from US$416 billion in                      2009. About three-quarters of these funds, or                      US$325 billion, will go to developing countries. 
                  
The                      World Bank estimates that flows to developing                      countries as a whole will rise further over the                      next two years, possibly exceeding US$370 billion                      by 2012.
                  “Remittances                    are a critical lifeline for families and entire                    communities across Africa, especially in the                    aftermath of the global crisis,” Ratha said, adding                    that the fact that remittances are so large, come in                    foreign currency and go directly to households,                    means that these transfers have a significant impact                    on poverty reduction, funding for housing and                    education, basic essential needs, and even business                    investments
                
Author: Baboucarr                    Senghore
              
              
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