A spike in the number of asylum seekers in the EU

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A spike in the number of asylum seekers in the EU 1951 Convention and 1967 Protocol The EU Dublin Regulation EU Directives EASO (2018)

Two questions motivated the study Who are the asylum seekers and why are they choosing to come to the EU and what are their motivations? Who decides to go vs. stay behind? The migration experience What is the nature of the labor supply that these asylum seekers constitute? Human capital 3

Outcome of the study Contribute to filling the data and knowledge gaps Scarcity of policy-relevant data and analysis Complement global knowledge agenda on forced displacement Contribute through World Bank s technical expertise on sampling, data collection and welfare analysis Sets an agenda for future data and analytical work 4

Scope Survey designed to allow meaningful benchmarking of asylum seeker population, with comparisons between asylum seekers, with countries of origin, and with general world population. Sampling designed to be representative of the adult population staying at reception centers in Italy and Greece at the time of the survey The survey does not include (i) those who stayed in 3 rd countries outside the E.U. or remained in country of origin; (ii) people in earlier (or later) waves of migration; (iii) people who did not stay in reception centers; and (iv) unaccompanied minors. 5

Multiple-methods data Target population: asylum seekers 18+ years hosted in centers/camps in Italy and Greece, from top nationalities of arrivals (sample does NOT include unaccompanied minors) Timing of data collection: January May 2017 I. Quantitative Two-stage stratified sample Italy 2,444 (2,139 males and 305 females) Nationalities: Nigeria, Gambia, Senegal, Eritrea, Mali, Cote d Ivoire, Guinea, Somalia, Sudan (72% of total 2016 arrivals) Greece 1,680 (1,101 males and 579 females) Nationalities: Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq (91% of total 2016 arrivals) Multiple languages English, French, Arabic, Farsi, Tigrigna, Bambara Multiple modules Comparability between refugees, with individuals in country of residence, with international standards II. Qualitative Individual In-depth Interviews and Focus Groups, Key Informant Interviews 260 participants in 16 centers across Italy and Greece Non-overlapping sample with quantitative Composition: nationalities as in quantitative data, oversampling women, variation in marital status 6

III. Literacy assessment (developed with OECD) To avoid mismeasurement and lack of comparability of education standards across countries Computer-based measurement of proficiency Subsample of the quantitative sample Administered in official languages 45 minutes on average for completion Validity checks Results are comparable across all countries with PIAAC data or equivalent 7

Five key messages 1 2 Heterogeneity among asylum seekers - Country of origin, family composition High cost of journey: monetary and physical/psychological - 3 to 4 years of income (at poverty line) - High incidence of violence (Italy route) - high risks incurred during sea crossing 3 4 5 Education, past work experience, and literacy proficiency assessment suggest asylum seekers will supply low-skill labor - Literacy proficiency low, comparable to recent migrants to the EU. High incidence of mental distress - Up to 70 percent of severe symptoms of anxiety and depression A robust data and knowledge agenda for understanding migration and forced migration needed - Many unanswered questions: host communities, panel data 8

Who are the asylum seekers? Context and demographics

Nationality composition of asylum seekers Nationalities arriving to Italy Nationalities arriving to Greece UNHCR (2018)

Migrants face different odds of recognition EU Recognitions rates, 2016 cutoff at 40% Sources: Eurostat 11

In Greece, most will likely be granted asylum; in Italy, the flow is mixed Diverse origins in Italy High recognition countries in Greece Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample, and UNHCR administrative data

Not everyone came directly from their country of origin to the EU; some were settled elsewhere By arrival 27% of Syrians were in Turkey or Iraq before deciding to move to Europe. 34% of Afghans had lived in Iran, some for a long period, before taking on this journey. 18% of West Africans arriving to Italy are were settled in Libya or another West African country before migrating. Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample 13

Asylum seekers of high-recognition-rate countries Flow from high-recognition countries, by nationality, Greece and Italy, 2016 Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample, and UNHCR administrative data

Syrian asylum seekers in the E.U. 27 percent are secondary movers (from Turkey) 2/3 are families moving together

Afghan asylum seekers in the E.U. 34 percent are secondary movers (from Iran) 3/4 of migrants are families moving together

Iraqi asylum seekers in the E.U. Almost no instances of secondary migration 70 percent are families moving together

Asylum seekers of low-recognition-rate countries are concentrated in Italy Flow from low-recognition countries, by nationality, 2016 8% are secondary movers from Libya; the conflict altered the flows From a destination country To a transit country Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample, and UNHCR administrative data

Overall, quite homogenous group among those from lowrecognition countries: young, single, men Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

The decision to migrate is in line with the demographic profile of asylum seekers in Greece and Italy Greece Idea to migrate evolves through family discussion. Decision making power follows lines of patriarchy and seniority Italy Idea to migrate usually described as evolving through own initiative. Evaluation of migration as an option and planning happen in discussions with peers rather than family.

Overall, differences in profile across groups Single women asylum seekers Low among women arriving to Greece High among women arriving to Italy: 53% of single women from Nigeria 25% from Eritrea Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

The journey

The Journey to the European Union followed a few main routes

The journey was longer and more dangerous to Italy 3 relatively large transit points Rescue at sea A median of a month and a half in each transit point for those arriving into Italy, compared to over a week in Greece 67% of those arriving to Italy crossed the Mediterranean on an inflatable boat. Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

Asylum seekers encountered violence in transit, particularly those coming from Africa Violence en route Prison en route Work without pay Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

The Journey is expensive, and represents three to four years of income of a poor person in countries of origin Payment by route Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

Summary findings Cost of migration is high General awareness of costs and benefits Speaks to the perceived benefits of migration and deteriorating conditions at home

Who are the asylum seekers? Living standards and human capital

Many asylum seekers surveyed were wealthier than those who stayed Share by top and bottom quintiles of welfare distribution Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample, Nigeria 2011 Living Standard Measurement Survey; Senegal 2011 (ESPS II).

On average, asylum seekers in Italy and Greece had low levels of education Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

Education levels are in line with education levels in countries of origin Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample and World Bank 2018

For Syrians, clear differences between the waves of migration Sources: EASS 2017; for Jordan, KRI, and Lebanon: 2015-16 SRHCS; for Austria, Buber-Ennser et al. 2016 (limited to population 20-59 years); and for Germany, the 2016 IAB-BAMF-SOEP Refugee Survey.

Many asylum seekers speak a European language: many Africans in Italy come from countries where French, English or Portuguese is spoken Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

Asylum seekers have limited proficiency in designated language, but their PIAAC scores are comparable to those of migrants who have been in the EU for less than five years Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample and OECD 2016

Many asylum seekers had work experience: in Italy, most had basic occupation such as construction and agriculture Employment by age and gender Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

Mental health as an important policy dimension: Instances of mental distress were widespread Severe Mental Distress, GSI by Country of Origin Sources: Data from EASS 2017 Weighted sample

and may be exacerbated by pressure from family dynamics at this time of uncertainty Men: stress/apathy from inability to fulfill their perceived roles as providers and protectors Women: greater role within the household as they replicate their traditional female roles around family and household responsibilities in camps. Additional burden on women But also comfort in clinging to known roles and norms at a time of high uncertainty The men help us wash the clothes. They help us with the housework. But they have no work. This is very hard for them. Afghan women s focus group Sources: Qualitative surveys.

Insights into Policy

Insights into Policies MORE DATA AND KNOWLEDGE: The need to collect more data and further build the evidence; challenges to collecting data on transient and vulnerable populations; impact of policies EDUCATION AND SKILLS: Policies to support the early identification of skills of asylum seekers, refugees or other migrants to tailor education and labor market policies in host or origin countries MENTAL HEALTH: Policies to support the early identification of mental health needs of asylum seekers, refugees or other migrants SMUGGLING AND TRAFFICKING: Policies directed at combating smugglers and human trafficking networks could help curb the flows, but they could also have unintended negative consequences VULNERABILITIES IN ORIGIN/THIRD COUNTRIES: Policies to tackle vulnerabilities in countries of origin: asylum seekers come from situations that, in their views, make the costly and perilous journey worth it 39

ANNEX: Skills test validation Asylum seekers and worldwide population, scoring below 1 proficiency