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Must Read Covid- 19 Latest Detailed Information

We have just released a new report highlighting the shocks of COVID-19 on migration and reparation flows. The economic catastrophe induced by COVID-19 keeps long, broad, and prevalent in viewed through a migration lens.
Lockdowns travel bans, and social distance has brought universal economic activity to a near stalemate.
 The host countries face additional challenges in many people sectors, such as health and husbandry that depend on the availability of migrant workers. Migrants face the risk of touch and also the possible loss of employment, emolument, and health insurance coverage. This edition of the Migration and Development concise provides a prognosis of disease how these events might affect you universal trends in international economic migration and remittances in 2020 and 2021.


Endeavor to curb the dispersion of the coronavirus need to include migrants, who face risks unique to their living and working situations. especially those in sectors, are vulnerable to the loss of employment and wage. Lockdowns in crowded place workers increase the risk of touch among migrant workers. 
There are many people who wish to return home but are stranded due to the services of transport, although the host countries have provided some relief measures to the workers.

The report is largely focused on international expatriates, but governments should not ignore the plight of internal expatriates. The magnitude of the internal expatriate is about two-and-a-half times that of the international expatriate. Lockdowns and loss of employment prompted a chaotic and painful process of mass return for internal migrants in many countries. Governments need to address the challenges facing internal expatriates by including them in health services and cash transference and other social programs and protecting them from discrimination. In 2020, due to the global economic contraction, remittance flows to low and middle-income countries (LMICs) are expected to drop by around 20 percent to $445 billion, from $554 billion in 2019. Migrant despatch provides an economic lifeline to poor households in many countries; a decrease in dispatch flows could increase poverty and reduce households’ approach to much-needed health services. Remittance-dependant countries could see households at risk as dispatch incomes decline over this period.



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