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Outsourcing Welfare - How the Money Immigrants Send Home Contributes to Stability in Developing Countries (Hardcover)
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Outsourcing Welfare - How the Money Immigrants Send Home Contributes to Stability in Developing Countries (Hardcover)
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Rising food prices, climate change, and the ravages of global
capitalism have made the poor increasingly vulnerable to economic
crises. At the same time, the governments of many developing
countries have adopted austerity measures that leave their citizens
without a safety net in times of need. This combination poses a
potent threat to social and political stability throughout the
developing world. How do the poor cope with economic crises when
their governments fail to guarantee social welfare? How do
societies keep from fracturing under the weight of economic
grievances and civil unrest? Outsourcing Welfare argues that the
answers to these questions lie with remittances, the hundreds of
billions of dollars that international migrants send to their home
countries. Remittances are a leading source of income in dozens of
developing economies and a critical lifeline that millions of
families use to pay for food, healthcare, clothing, and other
basics. In the absence of adequate government social protections,
remittances insulate poor families from the full pain of economic
crises, and in doing so, reduce the severity of grievances that
fuel populist anger, civil unrest, and political instability.
Through stories from his fieldwork in Mexico and Central America
and analyses of data from Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, and
the Middle East, Roy Germano shows how remittances buffer economic
shocks, contribute to economic optimism, and dampen the threat of
popular discontent during economic crises. Germano argues that
remittances perform a social, economic, and political function that
is strikingly similar to social spending, and that counting on
people to migrate and send money home has become a de facto social
welfare policy in many developing countries.
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