Spatial Patterns in the Intra- European Migration by

Similar documents
Geographical Patterns in the Intra-European Migration before and after Eastern Enlargement: The Connectivity Approach 1

Geographical mobility in the context of EU enlargement

What does the Tourism Demand Surveys tell about long distance travel? Linda Christensen Otto Anker Nielsen

Labour market integration of low skilled migrants in Europe: Economic impact. Gudrun Biffl

September 2012 Euro area unemployment rate at 11.6% EU27 at 10.6%

Migration as an Adjustment Mechanism in a Crisis-Stricken Europe

Euro area unemployment rate at 9.9% EU27 at 9.4%

Convergence: a narrative for Europe. 12 June 2018

Statistics on intra-eu labour mobility 2015 Annual Report

Special Eurobarometer 461. Report. Designing Europe s future:

"Science, Research and Innovation Performance of the EU 2018"

Forecasting skill supply and demand in Europe: Migration

Alternative views of the role of wages: contours of a European Minimum Wage

Territorial Evidence for a European Urban Agenda

in focus Statistics How mobile are highly qualified human resources in science and technology? Contents SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 75/2007

EU, December Without Prejudice

Looking Through the Crystal Ball: For Growth and Productivity, Can Central Europe be of Service?

The catching up process in CESEE countries

Globalisation and the EU regions

Special Eurobarometer 467. Report. Future of Europe. Social issues

Special Eurobarometer 455

HB010: Year of the survey

INTERNAL SECURITY. Publication: November 2011

Favoriser la mobilité des jeunes au sein de l'union européenne

Objective Indicator 27: Farmers with other gainful activity

Early job insecurity in Europe The impact of the economic crisis

EU Coalition Explorer

Context Indicator 17: Population density

The Unitary Patent and the Unified Patent Court. Dr. Leonard Werner-Jones

Women in the EU. Fieldwork : February-March 2011 Publication: June Special Eurobarometer / Wave 75.1 TNS Opinion & Social EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

I m in the Dublin procedure what does this mean?

EU Coalition Explorer

EUROBAROMETER The European Union today and tomorrow. Fieldwork: October - November 2008 Publication: June 2010

Standard Eurobarometer 89 Spring Report. Europeans and the future of Europe

EU Coalition Explorer

European Parliament Flash Eurobarometer FIRST RESULTS Focus on EE19 Lead Candidate Process and EP Media Recall

Special Eurobarometer 469. Report

EU Coalition Explorer

Comparability of statistics on international migration flows in the European Union

EUROPEAN UNION CITIZENSHIP

ERGP REPORT ON CORE INDICATORS FOR MONITORING THE EUROPEAN POSTAL MARKET

Could revising the posted workers directive improve social conditions?

Special Eurobarometer 474. Summary. Europeans perceptions of the Schengen Area

Data Protection in the European Union. Citizens perceptions. Analytical Report

I. Overview: Special Eurobarometer surveys and reports on poverty and exclusion

EUROPEANS ATTITUDES TOWARDS SECURITY

Earnings, education and competences: can we reverse inequality? Daniele Checchi (University of Milan and LIS Luxemburg)

Flash Eurobarometer 431. Summary. Electoral Rights

Special Eurobarometer 464b. Report

EU DEVELOPMENT AID AND THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS

Flash Eurobarometer 430. Summary. European Union Citizenship

Flash Eurobarometer 431. Report. Electoral Rights

DEMIFER: Demographic and migratory flows affecting European regions and cities

Firearms in the European Union

Immigration process for foreign highly qualified Indian professionals benchmarked against the main economic powers in the EU and other major

Posted workers in the EU: is a directive revision needed?

EUROPEANS, THE EUROPEAN UNION AND THE CRISIS

EUROPEAN YOUTH: PARTICIPATION IN DEMOCRATIC LIFE

Special Eurobarometer 471. Summary

PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF SCIENCE, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION

Immigration process for foreign highly qualified Brazilian professionals benchmarked against the main economic powers in the EU and other major

Flash Eurobarometer 364 ELECTORAL RIGHTS REPORT

I have asked for asylum in the EU which country will handle my claim?

Special Eurobarometer 440. Report. Europeans, Agriculture and the CAP

CITIZENS AWARENESS AND PERCEPTIONS OF EU REGIONAL POLICY

Directorate General for Communication Direction C - Relations avec les citoyens PUBLIC OPINION MONITORING UNIT 27 March 2009

RECENT POPULATION CHANGE IN EUROPE

Special Eurobarometer 428 GENDER EQUALITY SUMMARY

Electoral rights of EU citizens. Analytical Report

The Rights of the Child. Analytical report

PATIENTS RIGHTS IN CROSS-BORDER HEALTHCARE IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

Europeans attitudes towards climate change

The European Emergency Number 112. Analytical report

Data Protection in the European Union. Data controllers perceptions. Analytical Report

Young people and science. Analytical report

EU Agricultural Economic briefs

This document is available on the English-language website of the Banque de France

Annual Report on Migration and International Protection Statistics 2009

Special Eurobarometer 470. Summary. Corruption

Intergenerational solidarity and gender unbalances in aging societies. Chiara Saraceno

PUBLIC OPINION IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

The Rights of the Child. Analytical report

LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY AS A FACTOR OF SECTOR COMPETITIVENESS

Acquisition of citizenship in the European Union

The role of business services in the New Economic and Industrial Policy of Europe

Flash Eurobarometer 430. Report. European Union Citizenship

WOMEN IN DECISION-MAKING POSITIONS

EUROPEAN COMMISSION DIRECTORATE-GENERAL FOR AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT

Malta-Valletta: Provision of interim services for EASO 2017/S Contract award notice. Results of the procurement procedure.

Special Eurobarometer 469

1. The diversity of rural areas in Europe: getting the picture

Council of the European Union Brussels, 24 April 2018 (OR. en)

Flash Eurobarometer 408 EUROPEAN YOUTH SUMMARY

Quarterly Asylum Report

Official Journal of the European Union L 256/5

Standard Eurobarometer 89 Spring Report. European citizenship

EUROPEAN CITIZENSHIP

Consumer Barometer Study 2017

The European emergency number 112

European Innovation Scoreboard 2017

Transcription:

Spatial Patterns in the Intra- European Migration by Vladimír Baláž, Katarína Karasová, and Martina Chrančoková Institute for Forecasting Slovak Academy of Sciences 02/09/2016 Bucharest

YMOBILITY Participants Participant No Partner Country 1 Department of European, American and Intercultural Studies, Sapienza University of Rome (scientific coordinator) IT SapienzaInnovazione (financial and administrative coordinator) IT 2 Faculty of Sociology, Bielefeld University DE 3 Department of Geography, History and Humanities, University of Almería 4 Irish Centre for Migration Studies, University College Cork IE 5 Department of Geography, University of Latvia LV 6 7 Department of Sociology and Social Work, University of Bucharest Malmö Institute for Studies of Migration, Diversity and Welfare, Malmö University 8 Institute for Forecasting, Slovak Academy of Sciences SK 9 Faculty of Business Economics and Law, University of Surrey UK 10 Sussex Centre for Migration Research, University of Sussex UK Total ES RO SE

YMOBILITY Objectives Key objectives of the YMOBILITY project: To establish the extent to which individuals consider international mobility to be a key strategy for mediating key life course transitions: a) school-to-work; b) unemployed-toemployed; and c) youth to independent or full adulthood. To provide a comprehensive overview and quantification the main types of youth mobility in the EU, focusing particularly on differences between and within three main categories: students, higher-skilled and less-skilled workers. How do they differ in terms of: a) their frequency, duration and geography; b) their motivations; c) their socio-economic characteristics; and d) their willingness to take risks? To identify the outcomes of youth mobility for individuals in terms of: a) their lifelong portfolio of skills and competences; b) their social welfare and health; c) the formation of more European and/or cosmopolitan identities; and d) the transition from youth to full adulthood. To understand, and provide typologies of, how individuals would respond to contrasting future migration scenarios, reflecting changing structural and personal circumstances, and the resulting future regional implications. YMOBILITY makes an original contribution by addressing future migration intentions (amongst those who have and those who have not previously migrated) by using experimental research methods, including the production of original and transferable software for use by other researchers, scenario building and evaluation.

PRIMARY DATA COLLECTION Online panel survey: 16-35 population samples Some 30,000 observations MIGRATION VERSUS STAYING INTENTIONS In-depth interviews: migrants and returnees Some 840 interviews MIGRATION AND RETURN EXPERIENCES Experimental research: 9 x 60 = 540 cases FUTURE MIGRATION DECISIONS

Intra-European migration: big canvas There is more about migration than jobs and wages The traditional models of international migration originate in the human capital theory and focus on decisions by individual migrants (Sjaastad 1962, Harris and Todaro 1970, Borjas 1987, or decisions by the migrant households (Mincer 1978, Borjas 1999). The cost/benefit approach failed to explain: (1) why the total volume of international migration flows remains rather low in World, where vast income differences persist over decades, and (2) why many migrants prefer countries with medium income levels over high-income countries. Theories based on the economic cost/benefit analysis work best for migration from poor to rich countries, but are unable to explain many distinctive types of migration between European countries, such as life-style migration or migration by tertiary students. Intra-European migration accounts for a much more diverse set of migration motives than job and income disparities. The geographical distribution of the migrant stocks only partially was responsive to income opportunities. Jobs and educational opportunities were major motives for the intra-european migration of V4 nationals (Kahanec 2012). Many of the migrants, for example, have migrated to the United Kingdom not only in order to earn money but also to try life abroad, see the world, or learn English (Parutis 2014). Migration between high-income countries and middle high-income may reflect more varied tastes and lifestyle choices, such as education (King and Raghuram 2013), novelty seeking, personal relationship, culture preferences, climate considerations and many more. The same pair of European countries may therefore generate quite diverse forms migrant exchange. Flow of the Portuguese labour migrants pursuing higher wages and students enrolling on British Universities, for example, meets flow of the UK retirees seeking sunny climate and lower living costs in Portugal

Average annual intra-european migrant stocks (million persons and per cent of total) Flow type 1997-2004 2005-2013 Growth rates: 2005-2013 to 1997-2004 Total stocks: 9.04 mil. 13.74 mil. 1.52 Stocks by position within the migration system centre to centre 5.57 (61.5%) 6.64 (48.4%) 1.19 centre to periphery 0.13 (1.5%) 0.22 (1.6%) 1.68 periphery to centre 3.12 (34.4%) 6.52 (47.5%) 2.09 periphery to periphery 0.24 (2.7%) 0.35 (2.6%) 1.44 Stocks by region of origin: Middle Europe 2.55 (28.2%) 3.33 (24.2%) 1.30 Eastern Europe 1.82 (20.1%) 5.23 (38.0%) 2.87 Northern Europe 1.12 (12.3%) 1.53 (11.1%) 1.37 Southern Europe 3.57 (39.6%) 3.65 (26.6%) 1.02 Stocks by geographical and language proximity neighbour countries 3.64 (40.2%) 4.38 (31.9%) 1.20 language proximity, narrow (same language) 1.96 (21.6%) 2.21 (16.1%) 1.13 language proximity, broad (same language family) 4.88 (53.8%) 6.94 (50.5%) 1.42 Notes: Periphery is defined as CZ, HU, PL, SK, SI, HR, LT, LV, EE, BG, RO, PT, EL, CY, MY and IS. All other countries are considered centre countries. East is defined as CZ, HU, PL, SK, SI, LT, EE, LV, RO and BG. South is defined as ES, IT, PT, EL and CY. North is defined as UK, IS, DK, NO, SE, and FI. Middle is defined as DE, FR, BE, NL, LU, CH and AT. Countries separated by sea distance were considered neighbours if connected via bridge (DK-SE) or tunnel (UK-FR) or when sea distance was shorter than 100 km. Language proximity (narrow) was established for countries, where at least 10 % of population spoke the same language. The broad concept applies to pair of the origin-host countries where at least 10 % of population spoke the language from the same language family.

Network diagram for intra-european migrant stocks (1997-2004 versus 2005-2013 averages, stocks over 4000 migrants) 1997-2004 2005-2013 The network diagram maps matrix of inflows and outflows from the 31 European countries. There are distinctive patterns of core and peripheries, where the core is formed by the UK, Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy and Spain in 1997-2013. Secondly, there are also strong periphery-core flows within the modules, and many these flows seem to be based on language proximity, geographical proximity and/or economic connectivity (AT-DE, CH-DE, BE-FR, FR-CH, IE-UK):

Determinants of the spatial patterns in the intra-european migration Correlation and factor analysis Spatial patterns of the intra-european migration network are modelled via function as mst fh = f(ev) where mst fh is the share of emigrants from country h residing in country f, and EV is a vector of explanatory variables.. The five major destinations for each country accounted for some 80%, and in some cases, for 90%, of total outflows. 1997-2004 2005-2013 Pearson Sig. Pearson Sig. Economic push-pull variables (Eurostat) 1. GDP (PPS) levels -0.025 0.761 0.004 0.961 2. Average wage (single. no children) -0.020 0.823-0.031 0.705 3. Average wage (married. two children) -0.028 0.744-0.037 0.651 4. Social benefits -0.106 0.206 0.054 0.501 5. Unemployment rate total -0.120 0.138-0.027 0.737 6. Unemployment rate (up to age 25) 0.002 0.976 0.031 0.701 7. Long-term unemployment rate -0.134 0.097-0.047 0.563 Non-monetary costs and benefits (E Social Survey) 8. Life satisfaction 0.033 0.687-0.038 0.637 9. Satisfaction with current econ. performance 0.147 0.067-0.128 0.113 10. Opinions on the state of democracy 0.036 0.659-0.117 0.148 11. Satisfaction with quality of education 0.106 0.188-0.018 0.825 12. Self-reported levels of personal happiness -0.004 0.960-0.015 0.852 13. Self-reported levels of personal trust 0.005 0.949 0.007 0.926 Connectivity variables (Eurostat, OECD) 14. Merchandise imports shares 0.643 0.000 0.456 0.000 15. Merchandise exports shares 0.625 0.000 0.456 0.000 16. Foreign ownership of domestic patents 0.475 0.000 0.258 0.001 17. Domestic ownership of foreign patents 0.381 0.000 0.323 0.000 18. Patents with foreign co-inventor(s) 0.476 0.000 0.366 0.000 19. Nights spent by foreign tourists 0.664 0.000 0.540 0.000 20. Language known 0.291 0.000 0.338 0.000 21. Language useful 0.217 0.007 0.295 0.000 22. Driving distance between capitals -0.155 0.054-0.105 0.192

Factors of the spatial patterns in the intra-european migration Regression analysis 1997-2004 2005-2013 B t Sig B t Sig Constant 15.338 0.000 14.456 0.000 F1 Connectivity 0.669 10.651 0.000 0.476 6.748 0.000 F2 Languages 0.207 3.292 0.001 0.305 4.334 0.000 Adjusted R 2 0.491*** 0.319*** The Factor 1 on connectivity had the highest B (standardised) values in both time periods and remained the strongest predictor of the intra-european migrant stocks. The relative importance of Factor 1, however, decreased over time. The decrease probably is related both to territorial re-orientation of intra-europeans flows in tourism, trade and knowledge (independent variables), and to the re-orientation of migrant flows (dependent variables). The decrease in relative importance of Factor 1 also refers to increased diversity in the intra-european migration after 2004. The Factor 2 on languages increased in importance over time. It indicates that while many high-intensity migration flows developed between countries speaking with different languages (e.g. Romania to Italy and Spain), there also was an increase in flows related to language similarity (e.g. Germany to Switzerland and Austria). The Factor 2 also embodies growing importance of English as global language ( language known and language useful ).

The European migration system stable, but not static The network analysis, and the factor and regression analysis support idea of the intra- European migration system. The migration system is a product of interacting nationstates and corresponding socio-cultural, geopolitical, and economic factors and policies (Zlotnik 1999, DeWaard et al 2012). The system is an identifiable geographical structure that persists across space and time. Stability of the network does not mean the network of the intra-european migrants is static; on the contrary it accounts for dynamic relationships between countries of origin and destination. The geographical and (broad) language-proximity, for example, significantly informed memberships in individual modules. The dynamic nature of the intra-european migration networks is demonstrated by emergence of new sets of institutions shaping migration flows (visa-free travel, opening labour markets, student mobility programmes, and introduction of the new transport modes). The UK-centred migrant inflows from Poland and other Eastern EU Members, for example, are not informed by the traditional neighbour / language proximity framework, but by rising importance of English as global language, and availability of the low-cost travel (Jenissen 2007).

Migration of tertiary students (`2002-2007 versus 2008-2012 averages, all stocks) 2002-2007 2008-2012 The spatial distribution of the intra-eu student migration is highly polarised in three main communities (UK, French, German). The UK emerged as the major winner in the quest to build up international student stocks. France and Germany, on the other hand, built increasingly denser ties with their immediate neighbours. Again connectivities were more important than traditional push pull factors. Both income gaps and noneconomic variables, describing satisfaction with private life and public institutions were insignificantly correlated with student migration. Instead, investment in higher education and excellence in teaching and research were the most important push-pull gap variables.

Migration of tertiary students (`1998-2002, 2003-2007 and 2008-2012) Type Annual average stocks (millions of students) Growth rates: 2008-1998-2002 2003-2007 2008-2012 2012 to 1998-2002 Total stocks, of which 0.335 0.385 0.495 1.48 centre centre 0.044 0.045 0.054 1.22 centre periphery 0.052 0.066 0.106 2.06 periphery centre 0.158 0.175 0.200 1.27 periphery periphery 0.081 0.099 0.135 1.67 Neighbour country stocks 0.148 0.187 0.271 1.83 Language proximity stocks 0.129 0.156 0.230 1.78 Notes: The centre is defined as France, Germany and the UK, based on their relative importance as destinations. Countries separated by sea distance were considered neighbours if connected via bridge (DK-SE) or tunnel (UK-FR) or when sea distance was shorter than 100 km. Language proximity was established for countries, where at least 10 % of population spoke the language from the same language family (Germanic, Romance and Slavic). Some neighbour and language proximity stocks fall in both categories. There are distinctive patterns of core and peripheries, where the core is formed by the UK, Germany and France. Secondly, there are also strong periphery-core migrations evident within the modules, and many of these seem to be based on language and/culture proximity (AT-DE, SW-DE, BE-FR, IE-UK). There was a general strengthening of the UK as a destination across the total time period. Interestingly, the most distinctive periphery to periphery migration was between Slovakia and the Czech Republic in 2008-2012, a pair of countries with strong spatial and language proximity

The European migration system Winners and losers? Labour force in age group 20-64 (million and %) Country 2013 2060 Difference 2060-2013 loss 2060 2013 (%) UK 30.3 35.1 4.8 15.8 France 29.1 31.6 2.5 8.6 Austria 4.1 4.1 0.0 0.0 Italy 24.0 24.0 0.0 0.0 Spain 22.8 20.3-2.6-11.4 Czech Republic 5.2 4.6-0.6-11.5 Hungary 4.3 3.7-0.6-14.0 Germany 40.6 30.0-10.6-26.1 Greece 4.8 3.5-1.3-27.1 Romania 8.6 6.0-2.6-30.2 Poland 18.1 12.5-5.6-30.9 Portugal 4.9 3.3-1.6-32.7 Slovakia 2.7 1.7-1.0-37.0 Latvia 1.0 0.6-0.4-40.0 Lithuania 1.4 0.7-0.7-50.0 The Europe is undergoing an unprecedented demographic transition. The transition, however, is unequal among the EU Members. Some countries are impacted by population ageing. Numbers of available workforce are determined by (1) birth rates, and (2) net immigration rate. So far the new Member Countries seem major losers of the transition. They cope both with low rates and significant loss of human capital. Potential solutions Increasing immigration from third countries (needs to deal with xenophobia and improvements in immigration policies) Increasing employment opportunities and wages in high-tech industries

The European migration system Solutions for losers? Potential solutions for Slovakia Slowing down emigration Increasing immigration from third countries (needs to deal with xenophobia and improvements in immigration policies) Increasing employment opportunities and wages in high-tech industries

Emigration from Slovakia Unemployment rates and emigration flows & destinations Emigration was a vent on labour market in 1990s and 2000s Unemployment rates decreased, but emigration has not slowed down in 2010s. Why? Wages, career opportunities... 20 18 16 14 12 Unemployment rate, % 300 000 250 000 200 000 150 000 Emigration by destinatoon Czech Rep/ UK Germany Austria Other 10 100 000 8 50 000 6 0 I-93 I-95 I-97 I-99 I-01 I-03 I-05 I-07 I-09 I-11 I-13 I-15 I-17 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Emigration from Slovakia Working immigrants in Slovakia Some 27,000 foreigners working in Slovakia in 2016: 50% the EU national and 50% third country nationals (Ukraine, Serbia). Most foreigners were manual workers and technicians in manufacturing industries. 30 000 25 000 20 000 Czech Rep. Poland other Hungary Romania 15 000 10 000 5 000 0 2010 2011 2012 2015 2016

Emigration from Slovakia Wages and brain drain The average wages have been increasing rapidly, bur remain too low to prevent brain drain. About one quarter of the Slovak tertiary full-time students study abroad. As much as one half of them may never return. 1 000 Average monthly wage (gross, EUR) 40 000 The Slovak tertiary students abroad % 40 900 800 700 35 000 30 000 numbers % of full-time students 35 30 600 25 000 25 500 20 000 20 400 300 200 15 000 10 000 15 10 100 5 000 5 0 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 0 Homework to do: improve quality of education, build knowledge-intensive industries, increase wages, stop emigration!

Ďakujeme! Task 2.4 Design of the experimental methods months 3 9, task leader: IFSAS Vďaka za pozornosť!