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2010 Rev. Universitara Sociologie 53 (2010)
Economic Recession and Migratory Flows

handle is hein.journals/rvusoclge2010 and id is 53 raw text is: 





Economic recession and migratory flows


Abstract:  During  the past  decade,
migration has increasingly been seen as
having    potential   benefits   for
development, as well as significant risks
and  costs. Given this, how will the
current economic downturn  impact on
migration's potential contribution to
development? This article explores this
question  by  looking  at how   past
economic    crises   have    affected
migration, and by considering the likely
implications of the current financial
crisis for the migration development
nexus.

Key  words:  international migration,
crises, migration effects

         Trends in international
             migration
      At   the   threshold  of   the
recession, in 2005,  the number   of
international migrants stood at an all-
time high of  195 million -  a level
two and  a half times greater than the
75 million recorded in 1960.
      Trends     in     international
migration are often misperceived. In
the first place, the share that migrants
represent of the world population is
relatively low: they make up about 3
percent of world population  and the
world's workers. While the immigrant
share of the total population by major
world  region is largest in Oceania
(including   Australia   and   New
Zealand) and  Northern America,  the
biggest concentrations of immigrants
are  in Europe,  followed  by  Asia.
When  migration  is viewed through a
country (versus a regional) lens, the
United States in particular stands out:


               PhD.  St. Cristina ILIE
               University of Craiova
                 cristin il@yahoo.com
while it accounts for one in 20 world
residents, it is home to one in five of
the world's migrants.
      Illegal migration may be less of
a worldwide  phenomenon   than many
realize. The United Nations estimates
there are roughly  20 to  30 million
unauthorized   migrants  worldwide,
composing   10 to 15  percent of the
world's   immigration stock. An
estimated  11  million  unauthorized
immigrants  live in the United States,
according    to   US     government
estimates.  Along   with  temporary
migrant    workers,     unauthorized
immigrants  represent the flows most
closely linked to the economy,   and
thus the ones  most likely to fall in
poor economic times.
      As    the    financial   crisis
descended, immigrants were  having a
significant effect  on  employment
growth    in   many    industrialized
countries. While they represented one
in six workers in the United  States,
they  constituted one  in  two  new
workers  in  the United  States  and
nearly seven in 10 new workers in the
United Kingdom.
      In  terms  of  workers,   low-
skilled migrants  still represent the
bulk   of  global  migration  flows,
although   high-   and   low-skilled
immigrants   now represent equal
shares of migrants to the 30 countries
that compose   the Organization  for
Economic       Cooperation       and
Development,  the  so-called club of
wealthy nations.
      Many  of the immigrant workers
hardest  hit by  the  recession  are


53

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