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Economy
Immigration down by 6% during the crisis
2010-07-13
[Al Arabiya Latest] Immigration to rich countries dropped during the global economic crisis, reversing five years of annual increases as the demand for labor fell, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Monday.

A report showed that 4.4 million people migrated to the OECD's 31 member countries -- the world's most developed economies -- in 2008. That is a drop of about 6 percent from the year before.

The fall reverses five years of annual increases of 11 percent, the OECD said in its International Migration Outlook 2010.

National data suggest that international migration fell again in 2009.

Unemployment among male immigrants has risen more than among native counterparts because many immigrants worked in industries badly hit by the crisis, such as construction, hotels and restaurants, the OECD said.

Still, few are returning home, it said.

In some countries, employment of female immigrants has risen as women take jobs to make up for lost income of their unemployed spouses, it said.

But OECD chief Angel Gurria warned governments against toughening immigration policies because migrant labor will be needed to fill shortages as the economy cranks back up.

"Current economic difficulties will not change long-term demographic trends and should not be used as an excuse to overly restrict immigration," he said in a statement.

Without an increase in current migration rates, the working-age population in OECD countries will increase by only 1.9 percent in the next 10 years, according to the Paris-based institution's calculations. That compares with an 8.6 percent increase between 2000 and 2010.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Most universities in 3rd world countries generate lawyers and bureaucrats, not entrepreneurs. This is partly because one can make money in getting into a gov't position. where one can force people to pay "sma' sma' dash" to get anything accomplished. It is also because most of these universities don't have a lot of resources to produce real scholarship. One African university that a member of our family visited had a library the size of my kitchen. Middle Daughter helped the tech maven from another African university scrounge foreign language educational software for free, because the school had zero budget for it.

Also see this:
The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else

and look up Hernando de Soto Polar on Wikipedia
Posted by: mom   2010-07-13 16:35  

#2  Wouldn't it be easier to increase the standard of living in third-world toilets?

Yes, yes it would. However, it would likely involve some long very messy programs of offing all the kleptocrats and Kimmies and the cronies they put between themselves and us that operate their own game preserves, usually referred to as sovereign countries. That requires 'will', not the absorption of self doubt.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-07-13 15:29  

#1  Wouldn't it be easier to increase the standard of living in third-world toilets?

I'd like to think the standard of living has gone up in Iraq in the last 6-7 years.
Posted by: Bobby   2010-07-13 13:10  

00:00