CHAPTER 1: Introduction
A remittance is a transfer of money by a foreign worker to
an individual in his or her home country. Money sent home by migrants competes
with international aid as one of the largest financial inflows to developing
countries. Workers' remittances are a significant part of international capital
flows, especially with regard to labor-exporting countries. In 2014, $436
billion went to developing countries, setting a new record. Overall global
remittances totaled $582 billion in 2015. Some countries, such as India and
China, receive tens of billions of US dollars in remittances each year from
their expatriates. In 2014, India received an estimated $70 billion and China
an estimated $64 billion.Remittances are playing an increasingly large role in
the economies of many countries. They contribute to economic growth and to the
livelihoods of less prosperous people (though generally not the poorest of the
poor). According to World Bank estimates, remittances will total US$585.1
billion in 2016, of which US$442 billion went to developing countries that
involved 250 million migrant workers. For some individual recipient countries,
remittances can be as high as a third of their GDP.
1.1 Background of
the Study
As early as the 1930's, the family Olson (1993) provided
perhaps the clearest definition of cohesion. He stated, “Family cohesion is
defined as the emotional bonding that family members have toward one anotherâ€
(p. 105). Epstein, Bishop, and Levin’s theory (1978) also used the terms
“emotional bondingâ€, but they labeled this dimension as affective involvement.
Hampson and Beavers (1993) expected family members to have “empathy for each
other’s feelings, interest in what each other has to say and expectation of
being understood†(p. 83). Similarly, Moos and Moos (1981) conceptualized
cohesion to include the degree of commitment, help, and support family members
provide for one another.
Olson (1993) stated, “specific concepts or variables that
can be used to diagnose and measure the family cohesion dimensions are:
emotional bonding, boundaries, coalitions, time, space, friends,
decision-making, and interests and recreation†(p. 105). The terms “boundariesâ€
and “coalitions†need more explanation. Minuchin (1974), like Olson (1993), used
the term “boundariesâ€, which he defined as “the rules defining who participates
[in the family or small groups within the family] and how†(p. 54). Epstein and
his colleagues (1993) used the term “behavior controlâ€, which had a very
similar
definition to “boundariesâ€. They defined “behavior controlâ€
as the “pattern the family adopts for…situations involving interpersonal
socializing behavior both between family members and with people outside the
family†(p. 152). Minuchin (1974) stated, “the clarity of boundaries within a
family is a useful parameter for the evaluation of family functioning†(p. 54).
“Boundaries†that are too strict, or rigid, keep family members emotionally
distant from one another. “Boundaries†that are too diffuse, or almost
nonexistent, do not allow family members enough emotional distance from one
another. Both Olson (1993) and Minuchin (1974) stressed the importance of
“coalitions.†This term refers to small groups, or subsystems, within the
family that bond together. Examples of family coalitions include the marital
couple, mother-daughters, and father sons. Both theorists agreed these
coalitions are healthy as long as members do not become unable to mingle with
other family members or gang up on other family members. Theories implied that
family cohesion is important to the well-being of the offspring. Therefore, it
was hypothesized that lower family cohesion would result in more adolescent
behavior problems.
1.2 Statement of
the Problem
Every year, thousands of people migrate for employment in
foreign countries so that they can send extra money – remittances – to their
home country. Previously, scholars have focused on the effects of remittances
on the economic development of sending countries like Nigeria. However, the ways
remittances influence smaller-scale institutions, such as the family, are
seldom studied. Today, people migrate globally for several reasons, mainly
because of enhanced economic prospects, for educational and training, for
political refuge and also for other reasons. The total population of
international migrants was estimated to be 175 million in 2000 (United Nations,
2002). Buch and others (2002) estimated the global amount of remittances was
around $ 81 billion each year during the 1990s. Labor migration has become a
major source of household income in many developing countries. While there is a
lot of academic and policy attention to the linkage between international
migration for work and the economic development of a specific country or
community through remittances that result from this pattern of migration
(Harris and Todaro, 1970; Zimmermann, 1992; Papademetrious and Martin, 1991),
the influence of remittances on migrants‟ own family members who stay home is
seldom explored. Do remittances bind family members together in mutual hope and
pooling of resources to achieve common goals, or do they split families apart
in ego-trips and inequality of resource distribution among individuals? How
much of remittances go not for consumption and investment per se, but for the
mitigation of the negative externalities of separation? Do families adjust to
and embrace the transnational lifestyle or its permanent maladjustment more
than the norm? Is the family unity – based on emotional attachment, intimacy,
and priority of group over individual needs – survive spatial dispersion? The
problem confronting this research therefore is to investigate the role of
remittance on family cohesion.
1.3 Objective of
the Study
1 To determine the nature and significance of remittance
2 To determine the nature of Family cohesion
3 To determine the role of remittance on family cohesion.
1.4 Research
Questions
1 What is the nature of remittance?
2 What is the nature of family cohesion?
3 What is the role of remittance on family cohesion?
1.5 Significance
of the Study
The study shall highlight the potential benefit and
constraints associated with migration for foreign employment at the expense of
the family as a framework of study to proffer policies and strategies to
enhance family cohesion through remittances.
1.6 Statement of
Hypothesis
1 Ho The level of remittances is low
Hi The level of remittances is high
2 Ho The level of family cohesion
is low
Hi The level of family
cohesion is high
3 Ho The role of remittance on family
cohesion is low
Hi The role of
remittance on family cohesion is right
1.7 Scope of
the Study
The study is fundamentally on the appraisal of the role of
remittance on family cohesion
1.8 Definition of
Terms
REMITTANCE DEFINED
A remittance is a transfer of money by a foreign worker to
an individual in his or her home country. Money sent home by migrants
COHESION DEFINED
Family cohesion is defined as the emotional bonding that
family members have toward one anotherâ€
Coalitions. DEFINEDâ€
This term refers to small groups, or subsystems, within the
family that bond together. Examples of family coalitions include the marital
couple, mother-daughters, and father sons.
“Boundaries DEFINED
Defined as “the rules defining who participates [in the
family or small groups within the family] and how.
Behavior control DEFINED. Behavior control†is the “pattern
the family adopts for…situations involving interpersonal socializing behavior
both between family members and with people outside the familyâ€
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