Tag Archives: migrants

Happy to be home in Nepal

By Laura Sheahen

Madhu Tharu used to be a bonded labourer. With the help of a Caritas loan, she now runs a roadside snack shop. Photo by Laura Sheahen/Caritas

Thirty-year-old Madhu Tharu has been working for other people since she was a little girl. A bonded labourer in a village of bonded labourers, the Nepali woman basically belonged to her landlord. The system of serfdom that trapped her wasn’t abolished in Nepal until the early 2000s. So for years, she worked all day. Her brothers, at least, were allowed to go to school. As a kamalari–a servant girl– she wasn’t.

As teenagers, Madhu and thousands of girls like her were prime targets of traffickers, criminals who sell girls into forced prostitution or forced labour. As adults, women like Madhu are prime candidates for overseas work as housemaids. Uneducated and impoverished, they sometimes face physical and sexual abuse when working for Middle Eastern families in places like Kuwait.

Though some women do indeed earn money when they go abroad, the risks of migration are serious.  Even in the best cases, where employers treat women well and pay them fairly, mothers must leave their children behind when they go abroad. So Caritas tries to give women options that allow them to remain home.

A Caritas Nepal programme gave Madhu a small loan. She’s using it to run a tiny roadside kiosk that sells snacks. Her two sons can go to school, and her husband, a rickshaw driver, doesn’t have to work so hard.

Sumitra Bista was similarly vulnerable. “I have one son I have to support. My husband married another wife,” she says. “I used to have a small tea shop, but with the Caritas support I could buy more supplies and expand. The tea shop bloomed.” Working from 5 am to 8 pm, Sumitra sells about 100 cups of tea every day.

“There was no tea shop here before she came. She’s an entrepreneur,” says a man sitting on a bench in her shop. “People from the clinic nearby come here. The tea tastes good.”

Yam Kumari Bhat, left, was going to go abroad as a maid. A Caritas staffer urged her to use a Caritas loan to run a business. She now runs this tea and donut shop. Photo: Laura Sheahen/Caritas

The small loans are helping poor women—especially widows and those with sick or absent husbands—to stay with their children and be self-supporting. The loans also mean the women don’t have to take job offers that are suspect. Though some women find a happy ending when they go overseas, the female face of migration doesn’t always look very good.

Madhu is proud that she’s now running her own business. No longer an indentured servant, she is her own boss. “I used to work in other people’s houses. Now I don’t have to,” she says. “I’m happy I can earn money.”

Laura Sheahen, a Communications Officer for Caritas Internationalis, recently visited migration programmes in Nepal.

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Home alone in Nepal

Schoolchildren in the Bardiya district of western Nepal. Many of their parents are working overseas. Photo: Laura Sheahen/Caritas

By Laura Sheahen

“Where’s your mother?” Usually when you ask small children this question, the answer is predictable: At home. At the market. At work, a few kilometres or a drive away.

In villages of Nepal, a deeply impoverished country on India’s northeast border, children answer differently. “In Kuwait.” “In Saudi.” “She’s in a foreign country.”

Mahesh Upadhaya is older—he’s 17. “My mother went to Saudi Arabia for two years. I was 15 when she left,” says Mahesh, who lives in an area of western Nepal called Bardiya. “When my mother wasn’t here, I couldn’t go to school. I had to do chores and work in the fields.” Mahesh’s father is deaf, and as the oldest of five children, Mahesh had to help the family get by until his mother began sending home the money she earned as a maid for a Saudi Arabian family. About 200,000 Nepali women like his mother have gone abroad, usually to be live-in housemaids in Gulf countries. Some are treated well. Some aren’t. Continue reading

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Migrants as economic actors

By Olga Zhyvytsya, Caritas Internationalis project advisor

Financial inclusion promotes social inclusion of migrants in the country of destination – this was the idea that brought together the Italian Banking Association and civil society organisations at the meeting “Migrants and financial inclusion” held in Rome, 14 June 2011.

Italy, once a country of origin for migrants, today faces significant immigration flows. According to Caritas Italy data from 2010, 5 million migrants live in Italy and they constitute 7 percent of the population; foreign employees constitute 10 percent of the work force and 3.4 percent of enterprises belong to foreigners. Migrants contribute 11 percent to the GDP and pay near 11 mld euro in social security contributions. Moreover, near 1 million children of migrants were born or brought up in the country. As a result, Italy faces the growing necessity to consider migrants more as citizens rather than simply as guests, with a whole spectrum of social and economic responsibilities and rights.

One thing that links a migrant, as with any citizen, to the community of arrival, is full participation in its economic and social activities using today’s instruments, including banking. It is with the purpose of taking responsibility and of promoting the financial inclusion of migrants and the possessors of international protection in Italy that the Association of Italian Christian Employees, the Association of Social Promotion, Caritas Italy, the Rome-based Centre for Study of International Politics and UNHCR met to sign a memorandum of understanding with the Italian Banking Association.

Why is it worthwhile talking about the  financial inclusion of migrants?

The joint initiative between banks and academia and civil society organizations, presented at the meeting, produced a research that analyzes the relationship of migrants with banks in terms of banking, access to credits, migrants entrepreneurship, microfinance, remittances.

This work showed that banking (i.e. becoming a bank’s client) among migrants in Italy has reached 60 percent and the rate is growing quicker than migrant flows. It usually takes some time before incoming migrants obtain economic and employment stability and as a result start banking. Two main characteristics describe the process of migrant banking: relations between work integration and banking; national and gender aspects of migration flows. For example, being employed as a domestic worker doesn’t necessarily require the acquisition of bank account. On the other hand, female migrants as well as Chinese and Bangladeshis have a small rate of banking in general.

One interesting global initiative was introduced by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2009: reducing the average global price for remittance transfer down to 5 percent over a period of 5 years. From 2000-2010 remittances grew 10 times. It is a well-known fact, that remittances contribute not only to the well-being of families but also to the country of origin’s economic growth. The use of bank services for money transfers helps to formalise remittance flows and avoid fraud by criminal groups.

Another result of the partnership is the publishing of an informative multilingual brochure “Welcome to the bank” aimed at the basic banking education of migrant clients. Apart from basic financial services such as serving bank accounts, banks may tend to satisfy the most requested needs of migrants through tutorship and sponsorship: financial counselling on the development of business ideas, various scholarships as well as sponsorships for business.

The entrepreneurial face of migration

Migrant entrepreneurs, as it was noticed at the meeting, have less favourable financial conditions compared to locals. First of all, the lack of crediting history and property guarantees makes it difficult for migrants to apply for credit. This makes banks more reluctant to express their credibility to foreign entrepreneurs and according to recent studies made by the Bank of Italy, migrant entrepreneurs should pay higher bank interests.

In the research it was noticed that Italy still doesn’t appreciate the skills of migrants who are usually overqualified for employment sectors (near 66.3% are employed as artisans, workers, and agricultural labour force). Migrant entrepreneurs are active: in some places they are more inclined to start own business than native citizens. Migrants usually start their business in commercial niches of nostalgic goods and recently evolved ethnic business that request high level of innovation. Migrant enterprises can strengthen the economic relationship between countries of origin and destination through entrepreneurship remittances, resource mobilisation and know-how. Creation of economic activity is a way for economic security as through entrepreneurship, skills  and social capital, often not recognised, can be better utilised and appreciated.

Female migrant entrepreneurs constitute 6 percent of female entrepreneurs in Italy and 20 percent of migrants in general. This percentage has recently grown significantly: according to OSCE (the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe) analysis foreign women weren’t significantly touched by the economic crisis and their participation in the labour market has increased also due to the loss of work of family members.

Moreover, migrant entrepreneurs contribute to the change of Italian entrepreneurial reality with their promotion of commerce and investments. As one of the example, the arrival of migrants to Southern Italy according to Italian NGO Cooperation International South-South, brought economic benefits to the territory and promoted international cooperation.

In conclusion, discussion on the financial inclusion of migrants raised a more profound question: whether we are ready to care for a vulnerable part of our society in a serious way, i.e. respecting migrants’ potential and giving them a chance to fully participate in a society which only benefits from their economic activities.

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