10,542 research outputs found
Workersâ Migration and Remittances in Bangladesh
Bangladesh has sent more than 6.7 million workers to over 140 countries during a period of more than three decades since the mid-1970s. Most of these workers temporarily migrate to work in Middle East and Southeast Asia. This mass movement of temporary migrant workers has, to some extent, eased unemployment pressures on the over-burdened labor market in this highly populated country. More importantly, the remittance transfers received from these migrant workers have reached a phenomenal level of over 10 billion US dollar in 2009, approximately 12 percent of GDP in Bangladesh. This paper analyzes the trends and various other aspects of workersâ migration and remittances in Bangladesh. It further discusses the micro and macroeconomic impacts of remittances. While most remittance transfers have been used by migrant-sending households for consumption, there is evidence to show that these transfers have helped reduce poverty in Bangladesh. The analysis presented in this paper further indicates that these remittances may have significant effects on other macroeconomic variables as well.
Low Mass Gluino within the Sparticle Landscape, Implications for Dark Matter, and Early Discovery Prospects at LHC-7
We analyze supergravity models that predict a low mass gluino within the
landscape of sparticle mass hierarchies. The analysis includes a broad class of
models that arise in minimal and in non-minimal supergravity unified frameworks
and in extended models with additional hidden sector gauge
symmetries. Gluino masses in the range GeV are investigated. Masses
in this range are promising for early discovery at the LHC at TeV
(LHC-7). The models exhibit a wide dispersion in the gaugino-Higgsino
eigencontent of their LSPs and in their associated sparticle mass spectra. A
signature analysis is carried out and the prominent discovery channels for the
models are identified with most models needing only for
discovery at LHC-7. In addition, significant variations in the discovery
capability of the low mass gluino models are observed for models in which the
gluino masses are of comparable size due to the mass splittings in different
models and the relative position of the light gluino within the various
sparticle mass hierarchies. The models are consistent with the current
stringent bounds from the Fermi-LAT, CDMS-II, XENON100, and EDELWEISS-2
experiments. A subclass of these models, which include a mixed-wino LSP and a
Higgsino LSP, are also shown to accommodate the positron excess seen in the
PAMELA satellite experiment.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figures, Published in PR
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