"Allemagne." . . "Germany" . . "Change Serbie." . . "Remittances" . . "International finance." . . "International finance" . "Serbia" . . "Envoi de fonds." . . "Envois de fonds des émigrants Serbie-Monténégro." . . "World Bank" . . "International migration" . . "De Luna-Martinez, Jose." . . "Serbie." . . "Diasporas" . . "Remitenţele migranţilor Serbia şi Muntenegru." . . . . "Travailleur étranger." . . "Internationaler Zahlungsverkehr" . . "Rücküberweisung (Migranten)" . . "Envois de fonds des émigrants Serbie." . . "Envois de fonds des émigrants Allemagne." . . "Emigrant remittances." . . "Serbien-Montenegro" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Germany-Serbia remittance corridor : challenges of establishing a formal money transfer system" . . . . . . . . . . . . "Serbia has become one of the largest remittance-recipient countries in the world. It is estimated that in 2004 Serbia received US$2.4 billion dollars in remittances from Serbian workers in Germany, the United States, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, and other countries. This amount represented 12 percent of Serbia's GDP. This report provides an overview of remittance flows from Germany to Serbia and analyzes why a large part of remittance transfers take place outside financial institutions. The study presents a series of recommendations on needed policy changes to facilitate the transfer of remittance flows from the informal channels to licensed or registered financial institutions, thereby maximizing the developmental impact of remittances, reducing remittances fees, improving data collection practices, and strengthening the regulation and supervision of themoney transfer industry."@en . "Serbia has become one of the largest remittance-recipient countries in the world. It is estimated that in 2004 Serbia received US2.4 billion dollars in remittances from Serbian workers in Germany, the United States, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, and other countries. This amount represented 12 percent of Serbia's GDP. This report provides an overview of remittance flows from Germany to Serbia and analyzes why a large part of remittance transfers take place outside financial institutions. The study presents a series of recommendations on needed policy changes to facilitate the transfer of remitta."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "The Germany-Serbia remittance corridor challenges of establishing a formal money transfer system" . "The Germany-Serbia remittance corridor challenges of establishing a formal money transfer system"@en . . . . . "Germany-Serbia remittance corridor challenges of establishing a formal money transfer system" . . "The Germany-Serbia Remittance Corridor Challenges of Establishing a Formal Money Transfer System"@en . . "The Germany-Serbia remittance corridor : challenges of establishing a formal money transfer system" . "The Germany-Serbia remittance corridor : challenges of establishing a formal money transfer system"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Livres électroniques" . "Electronic resource"@en . . . "Electronic books"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Remitenţele migranţilor Germania." . . "Deutschland" . . "Change Allemagne." . . "Zonder onderwerpscode: wereldeconomie, ontwikkelingsproblematiek." . . "BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Foreign Exchange." . . "Change Serbie-Monténégro." . . "International economic relations." . . "International economic relations" .