Today's Headlines
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- Raila Revives Pentagon At Dinner
- Hardline Islamist Leader Tells Kenya Not to Send Its Troops
- Kibaki Pledges More Cattle to Farmers
- The Obama Administration - the Hard Work Begins
- Kibaki Here for Three-Day State Visit
- KCB Trading on Stock Market
- Love Thy Neighbour
- Diocese Condemns Lynching of Suspected Criminals
- é Event
- UN Warns of Crisis in Kenyan Camps
- Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania Disagree On Land Ownership
- Safaricom Braves Market to Register Profits
- Pirates Hijack Saudi Ship Off Kenya
- Now Pirates Attack Saudi Ship
- Kanda Bongoman Thrills Nairobi
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- Regional Bishops to Strengthen Apostolate to the Nomads
- Religious Leaders Criticize MPs' Move to Reject Taxation
- Bishop Says Sisters' Kidnappers are Mere Vandals
- Somali Pirates Seize Chinese Ship
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- Nairobi Gets High On Obama
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- KNCHR Position On the Waki Report
- What the Global Left Can Learn From Obama's Victory
- A Global Health Model, Village By Village
- ICT - Kenya?s Seacom Cable Construction Advances
- Whom Will You Pick for the Athlete of the Year Award?
- Odinga Issues Threat On Polls Violence Report
Business Daily (Nairobi)
May 7, 2008
News Article By Geoffrey Irungu
Citi Bank has secured an agreement with St George's Healthcare NHS Trust to offer the "Remit as You Earn" (RAYE) service to the Trust's employees.
RAYE is a means of sending money overseas on a regular basis and is targeted at the diaspora. Citi will roll out the service in the next few months. In a Press release, Citi said it had approached other public and private sector organisations for a similar deal.
RAYE is based on QuikRemit, a remittance platform with distribution and foreign exchange capabilities spanning more than 90 countries.
It targets countries such as India, Pakistan, the Philippines, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya as well as cash and non-cash delivery methods. The PayQuik team joined Citi in February, this year.
Citi says RAYE will support wider UK Government objectives on development as the new service should bring significant economic savings to users, which would directly benefit the receivers of the money in developing countries.
The statement said RAYE will reduce the total cost of remittance by as much as 53 per cent, or £130 per year for an employee who earns £2,000 a month in the UK and who sends 15 per cent of his salary back home as an example.
It said a major hindrance to determining what is sent from the diaspora relates to the many unofficial channels used. "A second-order positive economic impact of RAYE would be the creation of an official channel for workers to send money home.
This new offering should help them to reduce the amounts they send through unofficial channels," said the statement from the UNDP communications office and the UK's Department for International Development.
"Despite the lack of quantitative information, we believe the economic benefits of channelling money through formal channels would be substantial," it said.


