2000
DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.00235
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Migration and remittances in island microstates: a comparative perspective on the South Pacific and the Caribbean

Abstract: For several decades there has been extensive migration from the small island states of the South Pacific and the eastern Caribbean to metropolitan countries, resulting in absolute population decline in some states and new social, economic and political relationships between these island regions and distant worlds. Early research on the consequences for island development of return migration and remittances dwelt upon the unproductive nature of expenditures and the various problems return migration and remittan… Show more

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Cited by 129 publications
(100 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…Existing studies on remittances have mainly focused on developing countries, particularly the small island developing countries, where remittances play a significant role in their economic growth rates (Brown and Ahlburg 1999;Connell and Conway 2000;Nica 2014;Bettin et al 2015). The small island developing countries are constrained by underdeveloped tradable sector.…”
Section: Theoretical Models Related To Remittance and Economic Growthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing studies on remittances have mainly focused on developing countries, particularly the small island developing countries, where remittances play a significant role in their economic growth rates (Brown and Ahlburg 1999;Connell and Conway 2000;Nica 2014;Bettin et al 2015). The small island developing countries are constrained by underdeveloped tradable sector.…”
Section: Theoretical Models Related To Remittance and Economic Growthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Remittances themselves and the role they perform in the economy of many developing states had been studied for a number of years, for example, the function of remittances for the economies of small Pacific island states [37,38]. And one early typology report published by the FATF identified the use of 'remittance services' as a money laundering technique found in Asia, while the typology report released the following year provided more information on the operation of remittances services and hawala (the Arabic name for one method) as an 'underground banking' system that was 'almost always associated with ethnic groups from Africa and Asia' ( [25], p. 10; [39], p. 7).…”
Section: The World Beyond the Fatfmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Entire regions, and therefore entire communities, are dependent on these mines and the extractive fossil fuel industries in much of Latin America (less so in the Caribbean), so governments will need to carefully manage any transition and asset stranding to ensure that labor needs for employment are met to avoid significant unrest. However, the same issue could arise in the Caribbean if the tourist industry suffers widespread stranding, and could be intensified by a lack of diversification on small islands, and by the perhaps greater risk of a brain drain abroad from small nations, as compared to internal rural-urban migration in larger Central and South American countries (Connell and Conway 2000;Attzs 2009). More research is needed to assess the resilience of communities, labor markets, and economies to potential asset stranding, including analysis of the jobs available and the training needed for those communities most affected.…”
Section: Human Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%