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Malibuk

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Jan 9, 2017
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Rich world's jobs crisis jolts money flows to millions

(Reuters) - Carlos Sosa, a Salvadoran waiter in New York, used to send up to $500 a month back home to his mother to help pay for her medical bills and food.
But now, after the coronavirus hit and he lost his job in early March, Sosa has burned through his savings and the wire transfers have stopped.
The 42-year old says he is struggling to pay for even his own rent and is concerned for his mother. “It’s been a very tough situation,” said Sosa, who is in the middle of processing his U.S. residency papers. “The economic part is the most traumatic of all this."
Lockdowns imposed by wealthy nations to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, and the jolt those restrictions have delivered to their economies, are severing a vital lifeline for many often vulnerable people around the world: the billions of dollars in remittances sent home by relatives working abroad.
Roughly one in nine of the global population receives remittances, or about 800 million people, according to the United Nations. Early data show severe drops have already taken place.
El Salvador saw remittances collapse 40% in April from a year earlier, to $287.3 million, according to the country’s central bank.
Sosa says he looking for a new job but the ones available feel risky, involving cleaning places like trains or hospitals. He has warned his mother that there would be no more wire transfers for some time.
As he told her: “We will have to see how we survive this because things here are difficult.”

GLOBAL IMPACT
The World Bank has said it expects global remittances to low- and middle-income nations to fall by $109 billion, or almost a fifth, in 2020 to $445 billion. The bank projects the pandemic will cut into the wages and employment of migrant workers, who tend to be the most vulnerable when there is an economic downturn in host countries.
The steep drop in remittances carries dire consequences for the many countries around the world that are heavily dependent on such payments and whose economies are already reeling from a slump in demand triggered by the coronavirus crisis. The risks range from rising poverty and hunger to balance-of-payments emergencies for developing economies reliant on the cash.
The vulnerable spots include India, China and Mexico, the top recipients of remittances by value, according to the World Bank.
The Philippines, the fourth-biggest recipient of remittances, has nearly one in 20 of its adult population working abroad.
The world’s two largest sources of remittance payments have been severely disrupted.
The United States, which tops the World Bank’s list, accounting for some $68.50 billion of payments globally in 2018, has seen unemployment skyrocket, with more than 40 million jobs lost since March.
The Gulf economies, the world’s No. 2 source, have been hammered by lower oil prices.

Elizabeth, who lives near Guatemala’s capital city, used to receive about $1,200 a month from her daughter’s fiancé, who worked as a cook in the United States.
But the payments stopped after coronavirus shuttered the two diners he worked at and dried up his other side jobs.
The money had helped pay for Elizabeth’s treatment for stomach cancer at a semi-private hospital and regular visits from a nurse, as well as food and other basics.
The future looks bleak, said 69-year old Elizabeth, appearing frail as she stood in the doorway of her home near Guatemala City in early May.
"Now I only ask God to help us, and to help all those people who lost their jobs in the United States and here,” she said.
 

Malibuk

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Jan 9, 2017
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TD Bank charges $30,000 mortgage penalty to woman forced to sell home due to pandemic
When the pandemic hit Ontario, Kristina Barybina's income as a real estate agent dried up and she knew the writing was on the wall — she'd have to sell her own house.
She also knew there'd be a penalty for getting out of her five-year mortgage with TD Bank early — she just wasn't expecting it to be almost $30,000.
Barybina requested a one-month deferral on her mortgage, but says she quickly realized that deferring it any longer would just be pushing debt she couldn't pay further down the road.
She was only 19 months into a five-year mortgage, with a fixed-rate of 3.71 per cent, and still owed $591,000. TD used a controversial calculation to arrive at the penalty for breaking the terms. She owed another $29,530.
All of Canada's big banks use similar methods for calculating what penalty people owe if they end a fixed-rate mortgage early.
They can either charge three months' interest or what's called the interest rate differential (IRD) — whichever is higher.
The IRD is a calculation involving the difference between the interest rate on the negotiated mortgage, the bank's current posted fixed interest rate and the length of time remaining on the contract.
Banks argue they lose anticipated revenue from their client if they end the mortgage prematurely.
When the Bank of Canada lowers interest rates, the banks' posted fixed rates also drop, increasing the penalties for people breaking fixed-rate mortgages.
"TD is profiting by collecting this ridiculous amount of penalty, which is only based on the fact that the interest rate posted by Bank of Canada is so low — which was done to help people," said Barybina. "It's heartless."
Had the bank used the option of charging three months' interest, Barybina says she would only have owed $3,000.
 

decoy2673

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Oct 31, 2010
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They're basically having a music festival amount of people gathering in every big city in the states to protest. Looks like COVID just vanished right. Isn't it time we drop this hoax already? Not even CNN posts about it anymore.
 

bebe

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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They're basically having a music festival amount of people gathering in every big city in the states to protest. Looks like COVID just vanished right. Isn't it time we drop this hoax already? Not even CNN posts about it anymore.
Ontario will be the last place to open because of clueless Ford

When is the next election? His cheesecake eating butt needs to go!!!
 

G.D. Gentleman

Spin Spin Sugar...
Jun 24, 2019
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Ontario will be the last place to open because of clueless Ford

When is the next election? His cheesecake eating butt needs to go!!!
Ontario might even be worse than just last to open....they may open regions outside the GTA (as those regions have low numbers like the other provinces) and the GTA will be singled out and left for the very, very last.

Maybe the agencies will temporarily open up in other cities? Or Indies will head there to work?

Just guessing here....who knows what Ford is going to do next at this point.
 

Jasmine Raine

Well-known member
Jul 28, 2014
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Ontario might even be worse than just last to open....they may open regions outside the GTA (as those regions have low numbers like the other provinces) and the GTA will be singled out and left for the very, very last.

Maybe the agencies will temporarily open up in other cities? Or Indies will head there to work?

Just guessing here....who knows what Ford is going to do next at this point.
That is a good point. I assume that agencies would stay closed until stage two, but if part of the cities open up, will they still open. Will they move to having some of thier girls touring, or will indies move in the northen areas.

I had planned two tours. One was driving out west like I did last year going east, and I want to go north. If the north opens, but the GTA doesn’t, I would be torn about going.
 

Smallcock

Active member
Jun 5, 2009
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They're basically having a music festival amount of people gathering in every big city in the states to protest. Looks like COVID just vanished right. Isn't it time we drop this hoax already? Not even CNN posts about it anymore.
True... the fear-mongering has run its course and worn off.

Wow, the world has more important things to concern itself with than a new type of flu. Incredible.

The real covidiots would follow CNN right off a cliff if told to.
 

bebe

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
5,206
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Here you go, some facts from your buddy Dougy. Turn off Fox and friends! Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LHsivwxMdk
He said very little, except BUY CANADIAN and the extension of the SOE has nothing to do with start date for phase 2 of the reopening. Would be nice if we had a date.

Seems he is all about getting masks and face shields made in Canada. Bauer started making masks months ago. For some reason we struggle to make masks. Others in Canada started to make gowns.

In a few years BUY CANADIAN will be neglected once China makes stuff for even less than we currently pay for it. It always comes down to cost.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
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In a few years BUY CANADIAN will be neglected once China makes stuff for even less than we currently pay for it. It always comes down to cost.
I can't say I disagree with you on this point.
 

canada-man

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Jun 16, 2007
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Toronto, Ontario
canadianmale.wordpress.com
Love it. Using a picture from the era of epidemic polio to claim disease isn't a problem.
covid19 is much milder than the polio and how are you enjoying the lockdowns as immigrants, racialize canadians, women, single parents and the disabled and sinking into poverty?
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
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covid19 is much milder than the polio ...
No shit. But you have an extremely stupid way to claim we shouldn't worry about viruses. I'm sure if you were around in the 40's you'd be claiming polio was a hoax.

And strange to see pretend to have a social conscience. Were you aware that those maginalized groups are the ones at highest risk of catching covid?
 

bebe

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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Were you aware that those maginalized groups are the ones at highest risk of catching covid?
Show me the data that supports this assumption for the cases in Canada

Almost 12 weeks into the lockdown with no end in sight for Toronto

Maybe next Summer Ford will start phase 2 as he has no plan to move forward with stage 2 anytime soon

Time to end this insane lockdown Mr Ford!!!
 

t.o.leafs.fan

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2006
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Show me the data that supports this assumption for the cases in Canada

Almost 12 weeks into the lockdown with no end in sight for Toronto

Maybe next Summer Ford will start phase 2 as he has no plan to move forward with stage 2 anytime soon

Time to end this insane lockdown Mr Ford!!!
I'm sure Ford has read this post and will be taking action pronto.
 

basketcase

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Dec 29, 2005
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bebe

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Aug 17, 2001
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