Presentation by Mamphela Ramphele. International Dialogue on Migration. Geneva, 30 November 2004

Similar documents
According to the information provided by the PGA on 9 May, the fourth thematic session in NY on 24/25 July will be divided into four panels:

MC/INF/293. Return Migration: Challenges and Opportunities. Original: English 10 November 2008 NINETY-SIXTH SESSION

CLOSING REMARKS. Laura Thompson, Deputy Director General International Organization for Migration INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION

Extraordinary Meeting of the Arab Regional Consultative Process on Migration and Refugee Affairs (ARCP)

REGIONAL HEARING FOR THE AMERICAS. Mexico City, May Summary report

Global Expert Meeting on Migration in the Post-2015 Development Agenda

Migration and Development Policy coherence

THE MANDATE. 1, Rue Richard-Wagner 1202 Geneva Switzerland Tel: Fax:

Statement by Louise Arbour, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for International Migration

Chairperson s Summary of the High-level Dialogue on International Migration and Development

Asia-Pacific Regional Preparatory Meeting for the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

INFORMAL CONSULTATIONS OF THE IOM COUNCIL STEERING GROUP. Original: English Geneva, 12 June 2007 INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION 2007

REGIONAL HEARING FOR EUROPE. Budapest, Hungary November 2004 SUMMARY REPORT

MECHELEN DECLARATION ON CITIES AND MIGRATION

New Trends in Migration

EU MIGRATION POLICY AND LABOUR FORCE SURVEY ACTIVITIES FOR POLICYMAKING. European Commission

Enhancing the Development Potential of Return Migration Republic of Moldova - country experience

The challenge of migration management. Choice. Model of economic development. Growth

The Berne Initiative. Managing International Migration through International Cooperation: The International Agenda for Migration Management

Issue paper for Session 3

Original: English 23 October 2006 NINETY-SECOND SESSION INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION 2006

Director General International Organization for Migration (IOM)

EU input to the UN Secretary-General's report on the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

Globalization, Labour Market Developments and Poverty

Summary of key messages

Gender, labour and a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all

Migration and Families The multiple role of youth in family migration

Resolution concerning a fair deal for migrant workers in a global economy 1. Conclusions on a fair deal for migrant workers in a global economy

2015: 26 and. For this. will feed. migrants. level. decades

CONCEPT NOTE AND PROJECT PLAN. GFMD Business Mechanism Duration: February 2016 until January 2017

Introduction and overview

RIGHTS, LABOUR MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT: THE ILO APPROACH

Information Seminar for African Members of. the ILO Governing Body

International & Regional Cooperation on Migration

Decent Work for the 21st Century

GFMD Dialogue on the Global Compact on Migration

Background. Types of migration

UN Committee on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families (CMW)

Bern, 19 September 2017

Mayoral Forum On Mobility, Migration & Development

Your graces, excellencies, reverend fathers, distinguished guests, brothers and sisters, staff and friends of Caritas

ENGLISH only Statement by WILLIAM LACY SWING Director General, International Organization for Migration

NEW ISSUES IN REFUGEE RESEARCH. Beyond the nexus: UNHCR s evolving perspective on refugee protection and international migration

Moroccan position on the Global Compact for safe, orderly and regular Migration

MC/INF/267. Original: English 6 November 2003 EIGHTY-SIXTH SESSION WORKSHOPS FOR POLICY MAKERS: BACKGROUND DOCUMENT LABOUR MIGRATION

Workshop on Regional Consultative Processes April 2005, Geneva

International Migration and Development: Implications for Africa

INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION CAN BENEFIT COUNTRIES OF ORIGIN AND DESTINATION, SAYS SECRETARY-GENERAL, PRESENTING NEW REPORT TO GENERAL ASSEMBLY

BUILDING NATIONAL CAPACITIES FOR LABOUR MIGRATION MANAGEMENT IN SIERRA LEONE

Modalities for the intergovernmental negotiations of the global compact for safe, orderly and regular migration (A/RES/71/280).

Decent work at the heart of the EU-Africa Strategy

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is pleased to join this discussion on international migration and development.

OPENING REMARKS. William Lacy Swing, Director General International Organization for Migration

STATEMENT BY THE HONOURABLE SLUMBER TSOGWANE MINISTER OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF BOTSWANA DURING THE

Global Compact on Migration: Roadmap from A Development Viewpoint. Dilip Ratha November 14, 2016

(7) AFRICA-EU PARTNERSHIP MIGRATION, MOBILITY AND EMPLOYMENT

Thematic Workshop on Migration for Development: a roadmap to achieving the SDGs April, 2018

Inter-state Consultation Mechanisms on Migration and the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

SWEDEN NATIONAL STATEMENT. H.E. Mr. Tobias Hillstrom Minister for Migration and Asylum Policy of Sweden. at the. United Nations New York

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL

IOM Council, International Dialogue on Migration: Valuing Migration. The Year in Review, 1 December 2004

AFRICAN PARLIAMENTARY UNION B.P.V 314 Abidjan, Côte d Ivoire Web Site :

Towards Policy Coherence on Migration. Discussion Note INFORMAL MEETING OF THE IOM COUNCIL STEERING GROUP

INPUT OF THE FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS TO THE TENTH COORDINATION MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 1

Cooperation Strategies among States to Address Irregular Migration: Shared Responsibility to Promote Human Development

Global Unions Recommendations for 2017 Global Forum on Migration and Development Berlin, Germany

Immigration and Residence in Ireland. Discussion Document. Submission of the National Women s Council of Ireland

ILO/Japan Managing Cross-Border Movement of Labour in Southeast Asia

OPENING REMARKS. William Lacy Swing, Director General International Organization for Migration

Preparatory (stocktaking) meeting 4-6 December 2017, Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Mexico. Concept note

Social Research Center ( American University of Central Asia, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

Rural-to-Urban Labor Migration: A Study of Upper Egyptian Laborers in Cairo

Special Session of the African Union Labour and Social Affairs Commission. Meeting of Ministers

FAO MIGRATION FRAMEWORK IN BRIEF

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) A. INTRODUCTION

E/ESCAP/FSD(3)/INF/6. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific Asia-Pacific Forum on Sustainable Development 2016

First World Summit for the People of Afro Decent

========== On behalf of the European Union. 96th session of the IOM Council

The Global Compact on Migration at the 10 th GFMD Summit Meeting

Harnessing Remittances and Diaspora Knowledge to Build Productive Capacities

European Union. (8-9 May 2017) Statement by. H.E. Mr Peter Sørensen. Ambassador, Permanent Observer of the European Union to the United Nations

Konrad Raiser Berlin, February 2011

2011 HIGH LEVEL MEETING ON YOUTH General Assembly United Nations New York July 2011

Remarks IOM Director General, William Lacy Swing

Cooperation Project on the Social Integration of Immigrants, Migration, and the Movement of Persons

International migration and development: Past, present, future

MC/INF/268. Original: English 10 November 2003 EIGHTY-SIXTH SESSION MIGRATION IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD

Statement by Sweden. United Nations General Assembly Informal Thematic Debate on International Migration and Development 19 May 2011, New York

Labour migration, decent work and development: The ILO Rights-Based Approach

SPAIN S PERSPECTIVE ON MIGRATION & DEVELOPMENT: MIGRATION POLICIES

NOTE CONCERNING DOCUMENT MC/2153

CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY. Louise Arbour

CHAPTER SEVEN. Conclusion and Recommendations

Colleagues, ladies and gentlemen, Good morning.

Rights, Labour Migration and Development: The ILO Approach. Background Note for the Global Forum on Migration and Development

BRIEF POLICY. Mediterranean Interfaces: Agriculture, Rural Development and Migration

Inclusive growth and development founded on decent work for all

INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION

15-1. Provisional Record

An Integrated, Prosperous and Peaceful Africa. Executive Summary Migration Policy Framework for Africa and Plan of Action ( )

Transcription:

Presentation by Mamphela Ramphele International Dialogue on Migration Geneva, 30 November 2004 Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to begin by thanking Ambassador de Alba, Chairman of the IOM Council, and Director-General McKinley for the kind invitation given to the Global Commission on International Migration to participate in this important dialogue. We are, of course, very pleased that you have chosen to open the International Dialogue with a special panel, dedicated to the current work of the Global Commission. My co-chair, Mr Jan Karlsson, sends his regrets that he is unable to be here today. I am, however, very pleased that Commission members Sergio Marchi and N.K. Singh, as well as the Executive Director of the Global Commission, Rolf Jenny, are on the podium with me this morning. We look forward to hearing from them a little later. To conclude my introductory remarks, I would like to commend the organizers of this meeting for their decision to focus this two-day dialogue on the theme of The costs, benefits, opportunities and challenges of migration. 1

As you may know, the primary task that has been given to the Global Commission is to make recommendations to the UN Secretary- General, governments and other stakeholders, aimed at providing the framework for the formulation of a coherent, comprehensive and global response to migration issues. There is consequently a very direct relationship between the theme of this meeting and the work of the Global Commission..... Ladies and gentlemen, We have a very wide-ranging agenda before us this morning, and I have only a limited amount of time at my disposal. I would therefore like to focus the rest of my presentation on one particular dimension of international migration, namely the linkage between migration, poverty and development in the less prosperous regions of the world. Needless to say, as a South African citizen who has worked for some time with the World Bank, these issues are particularly close to my heart..... International migration has become an increasingly large and widespread phenomenon. In recent years, we have witnessed a substantial increase in the total number of international migrants throughout the world. Countries that were previously unaffected or only marginally affected by 2

international migration are now experiencing significant movements of people out of, into and across their territory. Migratory movements have also become increasingly complex: complex in terms of the routes that migrants take and the way in which their travel is organized; complex in terms of the legal status pertaining to migrants at different stages of their journey; and complex in the sense that the traditional distinction between countries of origin, transit and destination can no longer be rigidly sustained. I would also like to suggest that the motivations for migration have become more difficult to identify and to categorize. As signified by the well-known notion of the migration-asylum nexus, a single person or household may decide to leave their own country and to seek residence in another state for a complex mixture of economic, social, political and personal reasons which can be extremely difficult to disentangle. But we should not get carried away with the notion of complexity. For one rather simple conclusion can be drawn from all of the evidence available to us. And that is that the vast majority of international migrants, whether they move on a temporary or permanent basis, whether their status is legal or irregular, whether they remain in their own region or move from one continent to another, move from poorer to more prosperous states. Poverty and inequality, in other words, are central to the dynamics of international migration. [repeat] Poverty and inequality are central to the dynamics of international migration. Let me quickly qualify and expand on that statement. 3

For I am not referring to absolute or abject poverty. We know from long experience that the most destitute members of society often lack the resources, information and connections needed to move from one country or continent to another. In fact, the poorest of the poor are most likely to migrate from a rural to an urban area of their own country, or to resort to alternative coping mechanisms and survival strategies. Rather, it is the issue of relative poverty and socio-economic disparity that plays such an important role in prompting people to migrate from one country to another. Let us explore this relationship a little further. I would like to suggest that the linkage between relative poverty and international migration is in two respects a manifestation of the globalization process. First, there is now a good deal of evidence to suggest that while the globalization process has had many beneficial consequences, it has also led to the growth of socio-economic disparities: disparities, within societies, disparities amongst states, and disparities between different regions of the world. Such disparities, I would like to suggest, provide those people who have lost out in the process of globalization with a very powerful incentive to leave their own country and to move to other countries: countries that offer them new chances in life, that provide them with a higher standard of living, and which give them the opportunity to send remittances home, thereby alleviating the poverty of those family members that the migrant has left behind. 4

Second, as well as providing relatively poor people with a powerful incentive to migrate, the process of globalization has provided those same people with the means which they need to move from one country and continent to another. In fact, the very success of globalization in establishing cheap and accessible communications, information and transportation networks has not only made millions of people acutely aware of the relative poverty in which they live. It has also provided them with the infrastructure and the resources which they need to move, even if their presence is officially unwanted by the states to which and through which they move. We see this taking place in the movement of people from the Sahel states and North Africa to the European Union. We see it happening in the migration of people from many parts of sub-saharan Africa to my own country of South Africa. And we see the same pattern of events in the movement of people from the relatively poor countries of South Asia to the more prosperous states of South-East Asia and the Pacific. On the basis of this evidence, we might conclude that international migration, and more specifically irregular international migration, is an integral part of the globalization process. Indeed, there now seems to be a strong demand for cheap and flexible migrant labour in the world s more prosperous countries. And in practice, states often seem prepared to tolerate the presence of informal labour markets which employ significant numbers of irregular migrants. At the same time, we must recognize that the world s poorer countries those countries from which most migrants originate have little real incentive to obstruct the departure of their citizens, even if they are leaving in an illegal or irregular manner. 5

From the perspective of such states, migration reduces the need to create jobs for large numbers of unemployed and underemployed people, especially those younger people who are entering the labour market for the first time. For the world s poorer states, international migration also brings with it the promise of remittance transfers, diaspora investment and new trading opportunities. And these resources are of evident value for governments that are struggling to maintain their balance of payments, to enhance their economic competitiveness and to prevent the issues of poverty and economic disparity from becoming a threat to social and political stability..... Ladies and gentlemen, Allow me to draw three conclusions from the preceding analysis conclusions which I hope may help to frame the debate this morning and in the rest of this International Dialogue. First, if can introduce a somewhat controversial phrase to our discussion, there would appear to be a degree of common hypocrisy in the current discourse on migration, particularly irregular migration. As I have tried to suggest, the world s more prosperous states bear a significant degree of responsibility for the forces which have prompted and sustained the movement of irregular migrants from one country and continent to another. 6

And yet it is equally clear that the world s poorer countries have their own interest in sustaining such movements - as do migrants themselves. For while they may be prompted to move by relative poverty and economic disparity, migrants are usually purposeful actors, people with an entrepreneurial spirit and a determination to make life better for themselves and their families. Second, there is a also a darker side to the role that international and irregular migration currently play in the global economy. Despite the fact that they are purposeful actors, many migrants, both regular and irregular, have limited access to their human rights. They do not enjoy what the ILO refers to as decent work, and they are often marginalized in society. This situation has some important consequences for the world s more prosperous countries. There are certainly many examples of good practice in relation to the recruitment, employment and integration of migrants. We must identify, learn from and replicate such practices. But must also acknowledge that in many parts of the industrialized and industrializing world, international migration has become associated with a variety of negative phenomena: xenophobia and racism; migrant alienation; social disharmony; and the growth of an unregulated informal sector which threatens the ability of both migrants and nationals to enjoy decent work. Finally, while considerable emphasis has recently been placed on the developmental potential and impact of migration on countries of origin, I feel obliged to sound a note of caution with respect to this issue. 7

Migration, I would like to suggest, can never be a substitute for an effective macro-economic development strategy or population policy. Remittances may bring many immediate benefits to countries of origin, but their developmental (as opposed to poverty-reduction) impact would appear to be limited. They may also exacerbate the socio-economic disparity that exists between different households, communities and regions. As we are seeing so clearly in my own country, migration can lead to the long-term or permanent departure of a society s brightest and best-educated young people. And when calculating the economic benefits of migration, we must not forget to factor in the high social costs that are incurred when migrants - husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, sons and daughters - decide to leave their own household and community in order to work in another country..... Ladies and gentlemen, please allow me to conclude. International migration is an inherent and integral part of the globalization process, and is a phenomenon which seems far more likely to expand than to contract in the years to come. We urgently need a more open and honest dialogue on this issue, and it is my hope that this meeting, and the work of the Global Commission on International Migration, will contribute to the attainment of that objective. 8

We can no longer afford to pretend that international migration is unnecessary and unwanted, and that it can be obstructed by the erection of increasingly restrictive barriers. But we should be equally wary of pretending that international migration represents any kind of long-term or comprehensive solution to the challenges currently confronting the world s less prosperous states. I believe that our vision should be one of a world in which people migrate out of choice rather than necessity, in a safe and legal manner, and in a way that contributes to - rather than detracts from - the sustainable economic and social development of their country of origin. If this objective is to be achieved, the world s more prosperous states will have to introduce more coherent policies towards the developing world, taking full account of the close linkages that exist between the issues of trade, aid, debt relief and international migration. At the same time, the world s poorer states have an equal responsibility to create the conditions which are required for entrepreneurship to flourish, for economic growth to take place, for poverty to be alleviated and for socio-economic disparities to be reduced. In the absence of such conditions, we know that many people will feel that they have no other choice but to leave their own country and community and to migrate elsewhere. Ladies and gentlemen, This International Dialogue on Migration provides us with an excellent opportunity to consider these issues in more detail, and I look forward to hearing your views. 9

Thank you very much. 10