- Competition for workers is rising significantly as populations age in rich and middle-income countries.
- In Sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific, people with tertiary education are 30 times more likely to emigrate than those who are less educated.
- This migration can aggravate a shortage of skilled workers to provide essential services such as health care. And since governments cannot prevent people from leaving, they need to expand the training capacity for such skills, experts say.
Populations across the globe are aging at an unprecedented pace, turning many countries increasingly reliant on migration to realize their long-term growth potential, according to a new report from the World Bank.
The World Development Report 2023: Migrants, Refugees, and Societies, identifies this trend as a unique opportunity to make migration work better for economies and people.
Wealthy countries, as well as a growing number of middle-income countries—traditionally among the main sources of migrants—face diminishing populations, intensifying the global competition for workers and talent.
Meanwhile, most low-income countries are expected to see rapid population growth, putting them under pressure to create more jobs for young people.
“Migration can be a powerful force for prosperity and development,” said World Bank Senior Managing Director Axel van Trotsenburg, “When it is managed properly, it provides benefits for all people — in origin and destination societies.”
Drop in working-age
In the coming decades, the share of working-age adults is expected to drop sharply in many countries.
Spain, with a population of 47 million, is projected to shrink by more than one third by 2100, with those above age 65 increasing from 20 percent to 39 percent of the European country’s population.
Countries such as Mexico, Thailand, Tunisia and Türkiye may soon need more foreign workers because their population is no longer growing, according to statistics by the World Bank.
Beyond this demographic shift, the forces driving migration are also changing, making cross-border movements more diverse and complex.
Today, destination and origin countries span all income levels, with many countries such as Mexico, Nigeria, and the UK becoming both sending and receiving migrants.
The number of refugees nearly tripled over the last decade. Climate change threatens to fuel more migration. So far, most climate-driven movements were within countries, but about 40 percent of the world’s population—3.5 billion people—lives in places that are highly exposed to climate-related negative impacts.
Current approaches not only fail to maximize the potential development gains of migration, they also cause great suffering for people moving in distress. About 2.5 percent of the world’s population—184 million people, including 37 million refugees—now live outside their country of nationality.
The largest share—43 percent—lives in developing countries. The report underscores the urgency of managing migration better.
The goal of policymakers should be to strengthen the match of migrants’ skills with the demand in destination societies, while protecting refugees and reducing the need for distressed movements. The report provides a framework for policymakers on how to do this.
“This World Development Report proposes a simple but powerful framework to aid the making of migration and refugee policy,” said Indermit Gill, Chief Economist of the World Bank Group and Senior Vice President for Development Economics.
“It tells us when such policies can be made unilaterally by destination countries, when they are better made plurilaterally by destination, transit and origin countries, and when they must be considered a multilateral responsibility.”
Origin countries should make labor migration an explicit part of their development strategy, experts advice.
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They should lower remittance costs, facilitate knowledge transfers from their diaspora, build skills that are in high demand globally so that citizens can get better jobs if they migrate, mitigate the adverse effects of “brain-drain,” protect their nationals while abroad, and support them upon return. Destination countries should encourage migration where the skills migrants bring are in high demand, facilitate their inclusion, and address social impacts that raise concerns among their citizens.
“They should let refugees move, get jobs, and access national services wherever they are available,” the World Bank says in its report.
International cooperation is hence essential to make migration a strong force for development. Bilateral cooperation can strengthen the match of migrants’ skills with the needs of destination societies, World Bank says.
Multilateral efforts are needed to share the costs of refugee-hosting and to address distressed migration.
“Voices that are underrepresented in the migration debate must be heard: this includes developing countries, the private sector and other stakeholders, and migrants and refugees themselves,” World Bank says.
Not all migrants are the same
Migration entails both benefits and costs—for migrants, origin countries, and destination countries. For all, favorable outcomes depend on migrants’ individual characteristics, on the motivations for their move, and on the policies they face.
However, it is largely the destination countries that influence policy because they define and regulate who crosses their borders, who is legally allowed to stay, and with what rights. Labor economics and international law provide the two main lenses to understand migration patterns and to design the appropriate migration policies.
Labor economics focuses on the “match” between migrants’ skills and related attributes with destination countries’ needs to determine whether receiving migrants generates economic gains—or not.
International law obligates destination countries to provide international protection to people who flee their country of origin because of a “well-founded fear” of persecution, conflict, or violence, and who cannot return without risking harm—the definition of refugees.
High-skilled emigration from low-income countries—the so-called brain drain—can inflict losses and create development challenges.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific, people with a tertiary education are 30 times more likely to emigrate than those who are less educated. This migration can aggravate a shortage of skilled workers to provide essential services, such as health care.
Because governments cannot prevent people from leaving, they need to expand the training capacity for such skills, experts say.
This effort could be supported through coordination with destination countries, including to finance higher education and training programs.
In essential sectors such as health care, additional measures may be necessary, such as minimum service requirements enforced through bilateral labor agreements with destination countries.
Parallel economic and social reforms are needed to ensure that skilled workers have attractive prospects and can be employed at their full capacity in their origin countries, the World Bank notes.