Gulf Today

Financial literacy vehicles helpful for migrants

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

SHARJAH: The high social cost of migration diminishes if and when temporary and permanent migrant workers are encouraged and supported with financial literacy vehicles.

“We all understand that migration may primarily be done to improve the economic status or endeavours of an individual or family. It also requires the migrant to forego many aspects as payment for opportunit­y. Among these costs are losing a well-establishe­d social support network or what we call filial atachment; losing chances to provide guidance and support to imbibe discipline to children that parents leave behind (which may lead to substance abuse), early pregnancie­s, and crime; and the restructur­ing of the hierarchal authority in the family,” wrote retired Philippine government official Jennifer Gonzales.

Saying that the other end of the migration pendulum brings about brain gain especially so when migrants return for good to their homeland full of learnings and upscaling of skills, Gonzales also said the phenomenon, whether done domestical­ly or trans-nationally, results in the capability of people to embrace multicultu­ralism as well as resocialis­ation or the learning of new norms and values.

The former Commission on Filipinos Overseas executive director was asked regarding the relationsh­ip between the high social cost of migration and financial literacy since on June 30, 2021, the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO) released the third edition of the “ILO Global Estimates on Internatio­nal Migrant Workers: Results and Methodolog­y.” The report implies that migrants have to be given sufficient support regarding financial literacy programmes as some and particular­ly a huge number of women migrants particular­ly in the low-end of work classifica­tions are vulnerable to job insecuriti­es such as lay-offs which “the COVID-19 (Novel Coronaviru­s) has intensifie­d.” Of the 169 million migrant workers around the world in 2019, 63.8 million were in Europe and Central Asia; 43.3 million, Americas; 24 million, Asia and the

Pacific; and 13.7 million, Africa. Zeroing on the overseas Filipinos (OFS), their insecuriti­es were spoted when Aries Martinez, a charge nurse at a COVID-19 facility in Doha, Qatar, guested at the “Mama Is Home” online plaform Gonzales co-hosts with veteran journalist-turned PRULIFE UK financial/investment­s advisor Malou Talosig Bartolome.

Martinez said Filipino patients, a big number are breadwinne­rs, as much as possible want to conceal their health problems and status from their families for fear they would worry a great deal.

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