by UncoveringTruths » Fri 22 Aug 2008, 11:26:17
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ug. 6 (Bloomberg) -- In the Mexican town of Tarimbaro, construction has stopped on new homes, so sales at a hardware store are half last year's total. A butcher who slaughtered a head of cattle a day now slays two a week. And Rocio Rangel feeds her son and daughter bread and coffee for dinner.
Rural Mexican towns are suffering as money transfers from relatives working north of the border dry up, the result of a weak U.S. economy. Remittances equaled 2.7 percent of gross domestic product last year and are Mexico's second-biggest source of dollar flows after oil exports.
``My children need more than this, but we don't have anything,'' said Rangel, 36, whose husband hasn't sent funds home from Florida in nine months.
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$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')arimbaro Mayor Baltazar Gaona Sanchez said Calderon's anti-poverty program benefits only about 6 percent of the townspeople and isn't having a significant effect. Residents work mainly in agriculture, growing corn, tomatoes and onions.
``There's still a lot lacking,'' he said. The economy of the municipality, which is 200 kilometers (124 miles) west of Mexico City, ``has sunk,'' he said. ``There are a lot of people who come to ask for help to eat.''
Maria Sebastiana, 50, who lives about an hour away in the town of Zinapecuaro, said her husband was fired from his construction job in Oregon and hasn't sent money to her since November. Still, her pregnant daughter's boyfriend has left for the U.S. in search of employment to support the couple and their child. ``Here, there's no work,'' Sebastiana said.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')nly half of Latin American immigrants in the U.S. said they sent money home in February, down from 73 percent two years ago, according to a survey released in April by the Inter- American Development Bank.
Agustin Garduno, wearing a paint-stained sweatshirt, said he sleeps in cars and on floors at friends' houses because he can't afford rent. As noon approaches and no contractors have pulled up to the corner of Van Nuys Boulevard and Oxnard Street looking to hire, it will be the fifteenth day he has gone without work.
``If you gave me a ticket, I'll go back to Mexico because here, there's nothing,'' said Garduno, 48, who used to make $1,300 a month and now makes about $500.