2017
DOI: 10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2017-24
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More financial burden-sharing for developing countries that host refugees

Abstract: The authors call on G20 leaders to extend more predictable and substantial support to lowand-middle-income countries that host refugees, in recognition of the global public good that these countries provide. Together with other high-income countries, G20 countries should fully cover the cost of providing for the basic and social needs of refugees. They should also help to expand public services and infrastructure for refugees as well as resident populations. Such international support for the economic integrat… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…2. Although refugees are primarily mobile and might not stick with one host country until they settle, which would advise the consideration of refugee outflows, some evidence gathered by the UNHCR and the World Bank suggests that most refugees remain in their host countries for many years (Lücke and Schneiderheinze, 2017). As of end-2018, the mean duration of refugees permanence in a host country stands at 10.3 years, and has been relatively stable since the late 1990s, between 10 and 15 years (in https://blogs.worldbank.org/dev4peace/2019-update-how-long-do-refugees-stay-exile-find-out-beware-averages, last accessed in January 2023).…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2. Although refugees are primarily mobile and might not stick with one host country until they settle, which would advise the consideration of refugee outflows, some evidence gathered by the UNHCR and the World Bank suggests that most refugees remain in their host countries for many years (Lücke and Schneiderheinze, 2017). As of end-2018, the mean duration of refugees permanence in a host country stands at 10.3 years, and has been relatively stable since the late 1990s, between 10 and 15 years (in https://blogs.worldbank.org/dev4peace/2019-update-how-long-do-refugees-stay-exile-find-out-beware-averages, last accessed in January 2023).…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The paper argued that the fund management model of the financial sharing center should change its thinking, build a new fund model, strengthen the prior control, and budget mechanism to reasonably plan the available funds in the region. Literature [ 24 ] believed that in the process of process reengineering in the process of enterprise construction, the process of sorting out the context would result in the re-division of enterprise power. This process was undoubtedly full of contradictions.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Enabling environments facilitate an array of downstream benefits for refugees, host communities, host countries and the world: Refugee self‐reliance through positive economic participation (e.g., formal rather than informal; licit rather than illicit; in safe, fair conditions rather than exploitative ones) (World Bank, ,b: 90–1; Arnold‐Fernandez, ); productive contributions by refugees to national economies and tax bases (LeGrain, ; Clemens, Cindy & Jimmy , ), and the self‐worth that accompanies a sense of meaningful contribution to society; equitable access to justice and opportunities for civic participation, both of which offer fair, lawful channels for redressing injustice, resolving disputes and responding to needs (thus diminishing the likelihood of recourse to unfair and unlawful responses to injustice or unmet needs); and more. Restrictive environments relegate refugees to economic, political, and practical burdens: Forcing them to depend on aid or engage in illicit economic activity (Icduygu and Diker, ; Marbach et al., ), creating legitimate but insoluble grievances as a result of limitations on life and purpose (Luecke and Schneiderheinze, ), and leaving them unable to regularize their lives where they are, but unable to go elsewhere.…”
Section: National Governance Framework In the Refugee Compact: Impromentioning
confidence: 99%