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Migration and Development: Reframing the International Policy Agenda
By Sharon Stanton Russell
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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June 2003
The subject of migration and development is high on the international agenda.
It has become a prominent theme in debates within the Euopean Union and in the
work of international organizations (see sidebar), and the United Nations
General Assembly will discuss the topic once again in its upcoming 58th
Session. Thus, it is timely to consider the characteristics of the current
policy discussion. What is its scope? Where is it taking place? How does it
manifest itself? And what aspects of it warrant "reframing"? A review of the
sources noted in the sidebar prompts several observations about the character
of the broad discourse on migration and development.
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Sources on the Policy Debate
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| As Kathleen Newland's article in this issue of the Migration
Information Source suggests, the discussion of migration and development is
wide-ranging. This broad scope is also reflected in the papers from the April
2002 Copenhagen conference on The Migration-Development Nexus (International
Migration 2002). Other recent examples of the current policy discussion
include the UN Population Division's International Migration Report 2002 (UN
2002), the recent Communication from the European Commission (Commission of the
European Communities 2002), reports from the remittances project launched in
2000 by the Multilateral Investment Fund of the
Inter-American Development Bank, the latest volume of Global Development Finance
(World Bank 2003), and various internal UN reports. These are just some of
the institutionally based examples of the discussion. In addition, there are a
number of studies—published in journals, or in progress—by individual
researchers that form part of the discourse. |
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Overview of Themes and Trends
First, the discussion in the literature tends to be not only state-centered but
also developed country-centered. In part, this is a function of the audiences
to which these documents are directed, and the nature of the organizations by
which they have been commissioned. This is not to fault them; they are doing
what they are supposed to do. However, one of the Copenhagen papers poses a
trenchant question about the motives of developed countries: "Can partnership with
developing countries be real if
preventing further migration is the principal European migration policy goal?"
(Nyberg-Sørensen et al., p. 49).
The motivation may be unpalatable, but if the intent is to promote greater
consistency between migration policies and development policies and to engage
developing countries as partners in this process, we may be well advised to
ignore the motivations and applaud the objective. That said, the perspectives
of, and policy options available to, developing countries are too often lacking
in the discourse, and greater attention to these would be a welcome part of any
"reframing." Further, at least some of the voices in the discussion of
migration and development raise the important point that policy on trade (an
important two-way relationship) is critical to development, and a much larger
and more powerful tool than aid, so the subject is not absent from current
policy discourse. In practice, however, trade policies of high-income
countries are too often inconsistent with their policies to promote development
in low-income countries, in part because trade policies are especially
sensitive to domestic political forces.
Second, the broad discussion also frequently suggests that the subject of
migration and development is "new" or has been neglected or marginalized until
now. It is true that the salience of migration and development in multilateral
organizations and international agendas has grown dramatically in recent years.
But this should not obscure the fact that there is a body of literature on
various aspects of the subject that goes back at least a decade or two. As we
move forward in the policy discussion and in new research directions, we should
not lose sight of the findings of previous studies, lest we "reinvent the
wheel." Of course, some "old issues" are still with us. For example, we are
not finished with understanding the "migration hump" (the relationship between
income and the propensity to emigrate). Among other open questions, even if
countries are better off in absolute terms (by per capita income and other
measures of development), what happens to the propensity to migrate if their
relative position with regard to other countries has declined with widening
disparities in income between countries?
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"Can partnership with developing countries be real if
preventing further migration is the principal European migration policy goal?" |
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Third, there is room for more explicit and nuanced discussion of what we mean
by "development." In much of the policy discussion, the term is not
operationalized or defined. Recognizing that "development" appears on both
sides of the equation—i.e., as both a dependent and an independent variable—a
reframed discussion would benefit from considering not only changes in levels
and distribution of per capita incomes, but also political and social
dimensions of development, including, for example, democratic institutions,
transparency, an active civil society, and equitable access to political
participation.
Fourth, the integration of migration in external policies and programs, noted
by the European Commission as "...a new field of action for the [European] community
co-operation and development programmes" (Commission for the European
Communities, 2002, p. 18), along with the growing attention to migration in
globalization debates and in regional processes linked to the
Berne Initiative
are likely to open new opportunities for research and insights into
the complexities and outcomes of these efforts in the realm of migration and
international relations. Finally, new evidence provided by the UN Population
Division indicates that 60 percent of international migrants (people living
outside their countries of birth or nationality) are now in the more developed
countries, whereas two decades ago more than half of all international migrants
were to be found in the less developed countries. Admittedly some of this
apparent population redistribution is the result of reclassifications following
the breakup of the former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. However, this shift
reminds us that the changing demographic factors underlying migration
(including changes in rates of natural increase, overall population growth, and
labor force size) will require continual reframing of the policy discussion
about migration and development, albeit in ways that may not be readily
foreseen.
Toward Prescriptive Policies
Remittances have long been a central factor in the relationship between
migration and development. Arguably one of the most salient, and welcome,
features of the current policy discussion is the participation of new voices
from institutional actors, notably multilateral and commercial banks, non-bank
financial institutions, and migrants' "hometown associations." Their engagement
has led to greater attention to—and some progress toward—reducing the
transaction costs of sending remittances, increasing the volume of flows
through official channels, and developing new instruments (such as
remittance-backed bonds), to facilitate leveraging remittances for development
purposes. So, what is there to "reframe?" Much of the current discussion
lacks an adequately updated and expanded knowledge base from which to derive
meaningful, prescriptive guidance to developing countries about what policies
are likely to enable them to make the best uses of remittances. To provide
such guidance, we need more and better empirical, multivariate analyses to
explore the efficacy of various policy mixes. For example, how do remittance
flows, utilization, and effects interact with—and differ under—alternative
approaches to macro-economic stabilization via fiscal and monetary controls,
exchange rate regimes, trade, and institutional reforms in financial sector and
state-owned enterprises? A better understanding of the relationships between
remittances and economic policies would help inform the decisions of developing
countries and strengthen their "agency" in dialogue with developed countries,
although we should also bear in mind that there are, inevitably, limits to what
we can expect policies to accomplish.
Maximizing the Benefits of Return and the Diaspora
The policy discussion about migration and development also addresses "circular"
or "return" migration, concerning which there are three points that invite
reframing. First, one thread of the current discourse focuses on the strategy
of linking development assistance to the willingness of developing countries to
take back ("readmit") migrants who originated from these countries, when a
developed destination country seeks to return them. A recent example is the
Communication from the EU Commission to the Council and the European Parliament
in December 2002, which postulated that, "...presenting a global development
package to developing countries will encourage them to enter into readmission
agreements" (Commission of the European Communities, 2002, p. 5). Such
language reflects the highly politicized nature of some types of returns and of
EU thinking about migration and development. In all likelihood, this approach
will not go away any time soon, in part because it is viewed (at least by some)
as serving to reassure domestic constituencies that migration is being
"managed." But in linking development assistance and readmission, all
concerned would be well-advised to study and consider the consequences—at the
household, community, and national levels in countries of origin—of
state-initiated returns, both planned and unplanned. For example, there are deportations
of irregular migrants, rejected asylum-seekers, unwanted migrant workers (such
as those expelled from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf States), and those
suddenly displaced by wars. It will be difficult to evaluate the efficacy of
EU efforts to link development and readmission until and unless there is
sufficient funding devoted to development per se. Of the 934 million Euros
programmed for external aid in 2000-2006, only 13 percent is allocated to
"development," and that for only two countries, Morocco and Somalia. The major
share of the budget is allocated to "management of migration flows" (read
strengthening border control and mitigating illegal or irregular migration).
Second and more generally, in the past various studies have suggested that
"return migrants do not fare well in the labor market. In many cases, their
unemployment rate is higher than [that of] non-migrants." (O'Conner and Farsakh
1996, p. 23). Given the many forms of return now taking place, from
deportations to "brain gain," it is time to revisit the experiences of
returnees, disaggregating them by types of return.
Third, the increasing efforts on the part of governments in origin countries to
reach out to their migrants abroad raise a number of issues that need to be
explored. The subject and implications of dual citizenship are already on the
agenda, but there are further, related topics that need to be addressed. For
example, what are some of the challenges to governance posed by transnational
communities? Do migrants abroad have the same "standing" in decisions about
their home countries as those who have remained behind? "Who decides who
decides?"
Conclusion
As the discussion of migration and development proceeds, it is to be hoped that
at least some key issues will be reframed along the lines proposed here.
Within the high-income countries, greater coherence between trade and
development policies—and more attention to the implications of the former for
migration—is warranted. More and better research is called for to strengthen
our understanding of the relationship between migration and both income and
other indicators of development, as well as to expand the knowledge base from
which to derive guidance to developing countries seeking to make the most
effective use of remittances. We need to assess carefully the risks and
benefits of various forms of return migration and to address the myriad issues
associated with governing transnational communities. Such reframing offers
the potential to strengthen the partnerships between origin and destination
countries.
Sources
Commission of the European Communities. 2002. "Communication from the
Commission to the Council and the European Parliament: Integrating Migration
Issues in the European Union's Relations with Third Countries." Brussels:
COM(2002) 703 final, 3 December.
International Migration. 2002. "The Migration-Development Nexus", Vol. 40 (5)
Special Issue 2/2002. See also The Centre for Development Research (CDR),
Copenhagen, www.cdr.dk.
Nyberg-Sørensen, Ninna, Nicholas Van Hear, Poul Engberg-Pedersen. 2002. "The
Migration-Development Nexus: Evidence and Policy Options", in International
Migration. 2002. "The Migration-Development Nexus", Vol. 40 (5) Special Issue
2/2002, pp. 49-71.
O'Conner, David and Leila Farsakh, Eds. 1996. Development Strategy, Employment
and Migration: Country Experiences. Paris: Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD).
United Nations. 2002. International Migration Report 2002. New York: United
Nations Population Division, ST/ESA/SER.A/220.
World Bank. 2003. Global Development Finance. Washington, DC: The World Bank
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