Migration and the Global Financial Crisis

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Migration and the Global Financial Crisis

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Update 1 - February 2009

Migration and the Global Financial Crisis: A Virtual Symposium



Update 1.A: An Overview by Stephen Castles



A Virtual Symposium



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The 4 edition of The Age of Migration was written before the extent of the current

global financial crisis had become evident. The book therefore does not discuss the

actual and potential effects of the crisis on international migration, and on related

topics like integration, xenophobia and remittances. The book's companion website

allows us to do this now. This update provides information and analysis on the effects

of the crisis on migration.



At this stage the evidence on the impacts of the crisis is still very fragmentary,

although some valuable reports and articles are beginning to appear. The following

are a small selection of many: (Chamie, 2009; Papademetriou and Terrazas, 2009;

Ratha et al., 2008; The Economist, 2009; Trinity Immigration Initiative, 2008). Many

of the websites listed on the Weblinks page of this site have also posted information

and analysis.



In order to get a better idea of the possible consequences of the global financial crisis

on migration, I wrote in mid-December 2008 to some leading migration experts

around the world, and asked them to take part in a "virtual symposium" on the topic.

I have received many replies: Professor Roger Zetter, Director of the Refugee Studies

Centre at Oxford University has provided a short paper outlining consequences for

forced migration - see Update 1B; Professor Philip Martin of the Department of

Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of California, Davis, has

written a very valuable global overview of the state of knowledge on the effects of the

crisis on labour migration and remittances - see Update 1C Other analysts have sent

me briefer information and references to a range of relevant publications - see

Update 1D. Yet others have promised to send special papers in the near future - these

will be posted on The Age of Migration website as soon as they come.



The Effects of the Global Financial Crisis on Migration



In my view is important to distinguish between short- and long-term effects of the


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crisis on migration and integration. Short-term effects mentioned in some of the

reports include:



• Return migration of some migrant workers to their homelands as a reaction to

unemployment or lower earnings (this has been observed in the case of Polish

workers in Britain and Ireland).



• Reduced levels of migration from origin countries to destination countries.



• Attempts by governments to provide incentives to unemployed migrant

workers to leave (e.g. Spain), with mixed success.



• Specially large declines in irregular migration, which is especially sensitive to

availability of jobs (observed in the case of Mexico-US migration).



• Reduced remittances (money transfers) from migrants to their home

communities, leading to possible hardship in communities dependent on such

transfers.



• Increased hostility to migrants among majority populations, leading in some

cases to conflicts and violence.



However, long-term effects may be rather different and to understand the potential

impacts it is useful to look at historical precedents:



• The world economic crisis of the 1930s led to a massive decline of

international labour migration, and to return (sometimes compulsory) of many

migrants from countries like the USA and France (see Chapters 4 and 12 of

The Age of Migration). However, some of the decline was actually the result

of restrictionist policies adopted during and after WWI. For instance in the

USA, the ‘nativist movement’ campaigned against immigration, and major

restrictions were introduced in the early 1920s.In any case, many migrants did

not return home in the 1930s, but settled and became members of the

permanent population of receiving countries.



• The recession following the ‘Oil Crisis’ of 1973 (when OPEC states rapidly

increased oil prices) had enormous consequences for migration, but hardly

anyone predicted them. ‘Guestworker migration’ ended in Europe, and

processes of family reunion and permanent settlement started, leading to the

formation of new long-term ethnic minorities. Large corporations developed

strategies of capital export and a ‘new international division of labour’, which

led to the emergence of new industrial centres especially in Asia and Latin

America – and in the long run to new flows of labour migration. The recycling

of petro-dollars was the basis for an economic boom in oil states. In some

cases (such as Dubai and other Gulf states) this led to long-term economic

development; in others – like Nigeria – the oil profits were dissipated in



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corruption and luxury consumption by the elite, with few long-term benefits.

All-in-all, the 1973 crisis was a major turning point in global migration.



• The effects of the 1997-99 Asian financial crisis were more modest. Several

governments introduced policies of national labour preference and sought to

expel migrants – especially undocumented workers. In some cases, migrants

were scapegoated for unemployment and other social ills – like epidemics and

criminality. However, employers (for instance in the Malaysian plantation

industry) quickly discovered that many nationals were unwilling to take on

‘migrant jobs’, even in a recession. Such employers demanded an end to

expulsion policies. In any case, the interruption to economic growth in Asia

was only short-lived – after 1999 migration grew again and reached new

heights.



The lesson from these examples is that the effects of economic downturns on

migration are complex and hard to predict. The current crisis may have deep-reaching

effects that we cannot foresee. It is probably mistaken to believe that migrants will

serve as a sort of safety valve for developed economies, by providing labour in times

of expansion and going away in times of recession. When economic conditions get

bad in rich countries they may be even worse in poorer origin countries. Moreover,

migrants are not just economic actors, who follow income maximisation motives.

They are social beings, who put down roots and form relationships in new countries.

At times of recession, the motivation to migrate may be even higher than before, and

remittances may prove a resilient form of international transfer, because of migrants’

obligations to their families. Finally, global economic inequality and the demographic

imbalances between the ageing populations of the North and the large cohorts of

working age persons in the South will remain important factors in generating future

migration.



References



Catan, T. (2009) January 24 'Spain's Jobs Crisis Leaves Immigrants Out of Work:

With Prospects Worse Elsewhere, Few Takes for Government Campaign

Offering to Pay Legal Foreigners Who Return Home' The Wall Street Journal.

(New York City, NY).

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123275552359911807.html

Chamie, J. (2009) Exporting people in Yale University (ed.) Yale Global Online.

(New Haven, Conn.: Yale University)

http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/article.print?id=11843, accessed 23 January, 2009



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Papademetriou, D. and Terrazas, A. (2009) Immigrants and the Current Economic

Crisis Migration Policy Institute (Washington DC: Migration Policy

Institute). http://www.migrationpolicy.org/pubs/lmi ... nJan09.pdf.

Ratha, D., Mohapatra, S. and Xu, Z. (2008) Outlook for Remittance Flows 2008-10

Migration and Remittances Team Development Prospects Group The World

Bank Migration and Development Brief (Washington DC: World Bank,).

http://www-

wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&piPK=641879

37&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&th

eSitePK=523679&entityID=000334955_20081204034714&searchMenuPK=6

4187283&theSitePK=523679.

The Economist (2009) 'The people crunch' The Economist 15 January.

Trinity Immigration Initiative (2008) Migration and Recession MCA Newsletter

(Dublin: Trinity College Dublin).

http://www.tcd.ie/ERC/pdf%20newsletters ... etter1.pdf.



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