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Philippine remittance economy hit Downturn hits Philippine remittances
(about 9 hours later)
About eight million people in the Philippines - or one in 10 adults - work abroad. By Jill McGivering BBC News, Manila Jobs at home in the Philippines and abroad are harder to find
Millions of families depend on the money these overseas contract workers send back. In the Philippines, about eight million people - one in 10 adults - work abroad.
But now a crisis is looming with the global financial downturn cutting jobs around the world. Millions of families depend on the money they send back.
Thousands of overseas workers have already lost their jobs overseas and many more are at risk of being sent home. But now a crisis is looming - as the economic downturn means thousands are losing their jobs overseas and being sent home.
Chain of dependency Migrant workers are called "the new heroes" in the Philippines because of the contribution they make to the national economy.
Rowena is a softly spoken young woman of 28. The money they send home to their relatives is crucial, paying for food, shelter and education.
She went abroad to work to raise money for her brother's schooling and her own future. But now a growing number - already in the thousands - are being forced home because they have lost their jobs.
But she has just been sent home from Taiwan - seven months into a two-year contract in a factory there. Laid-off
"Our company forced us to go home because of the economic crisis. The company didn't close but all the Filipino workers, we were forced to go home," she said. Rowena is typical. She is 28 and found work last year as a factory supervisor in Taiwan. The Philippines is home, but has never offered enough work
"We spent so much before going to Taiwan with our placement fees so we've not yet got back our expenses. So it's painful," she said. She has already supported her brother through school. She also hoped to save enough to get married.
She is not alone. One migrant group in Manila says that already this year about 4,000 overseas workers have been sent home in mid-contract. But in December, just seven months into a two-year contract, she and all her fellow Filipino workers were laid off.
National heroes "My plans are shattered and broken," she said. "I spent so much on placement fees before going to Taiwan and I've not earned back the expenses. Honestly I'm shocked."
When factories and businesses cut back, Filipinos, they say, are the first to go. Rowena is now staying in a hostel in Manila run by a Christian charity, "Scalabrini". Its 80 dormitory beds are all taken.
Back in the Philippines, their prospects are limited. The unemployment figures are debated - but one survey suggests more than a quarter of adults are without jobs. When I visited, many were out at government offices, filing applications to go abroad. Others played chess in the shade or badminton in the hot white-washed courtyard.
Many families only survive because of money sent back from overseas. Without it, they will struggle. A Biblical text was painted in large black letters along one wall, reading: "I was a stranger and you welcomed me." Families are now having a very difficult time... they're worried they'll have to stop sending the children to school Brother Luis Andres Maya, Scalabrini hostel
All this means competition for foreign jobs is fiercer than ever. Brother Luis Andres Maya, who runs the hostel, says he has noticed a sudden rise in recent months in the number of migrants being sent home without finishing their contracts.
I joined one of dozens of weekly government seminars which advise people heading abroad. "Many factories are closing and the first ones sent back are the Filipinos," he said. "Families are now having a very difficult time. They're worried they'll have to stop sending the children to school. They depend on the salaries sent from abroad."
Lhour, who is 30, was about to fly to England to work in a big London hospital. She said she would earn 10 times as much in England as in the Philippines - and needed the money to support her nieces, nephews and elderly parents. High hopes
In the Philippines, migrant workers are called national heroes. Without them, millions of families would go hungry. The competition to go overseas is increasingly fierce. Last year almost 1.4 million people went to work abroad, an increase of nearly a third on the previous year.
But as the global crisis bites, many more of them face losing their jobs - and seeing their families sink deeper into poverty. I visited the multi-storey offices of the Philippines Overseas Employment Agency, a government department which processes applications.
The corridors bustled with men and women of all ages. Many were attending the agency's daily seminars which advise would-be migrants about their rights in other countries and cover all sorts of crises, including death.Celerina Avedilla is one of the lucky ones with a new contract
I joined a group of more than 50 locals sitting in rows on plastic chairs in a white-walled classroom. The tutor urged them to be good ambassadors for their country and to send money home to their families.
Ludy Lhour Tria, 30, was one of them. The next day, she told me, she was flying out to London to work as a technician in the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel.
It is her second overseas post and she admitted that working abroad involved a lot of personal sacrifice - emotional and physical.
But the money made it impossible not to go. In the UK, she said, she could earn 10 or 12 times as much as in the Philippines.
"I can support my nieces and nephews," she said, "and my parents who are old now and dependent on me."
Celerina Avedilla, 45, was about to leave for Spain, to work as a domestic helper.
It was hard, she said, leaving behind her husband and four children, one as young as 11. But the family had debts.
A few years overseas was the only way she could pay them off and then save to send her sons to college. Those whose contracts are cut face huge problems back home
The hopes of these new migrants stand in stark contrast with the sadder stories told by those now being sent home.
Oliver, a gently-spoken man with a round face, told me he had spent most of his adult life working abroad, first in factories in Taiwan, then as an assistant cook on a Greek-owned merchant ship.
In December, the entire crew of 50, including the captain, were told to pack their bags. Oliver was less than three months into a new contract and is now unable to support his wife and nine-month old son.
"I don't know where to find money for milk and food for my wife," he told me. "It feels so bad."