TOWARD A GLOBAL SYSTEM OF HUMAN MOBILITY: THREE THOUGHTS
Migration is already a significant global phenomenon, and it is likely to become more so. According to a recent World Bank report , there are two hundred million international migrants. The study reports that “migration pressures” will continue “for the foreseeable future.” It will take “decades” to...
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Veröffentlicht in: | AJIL unbound 2017-01, Vol.111, p.24-28 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Migration is already a significant global phenomenon, and it is likely to become
more so. According to a recent
World Bank
report
, there are two hundred million international migrants. The
study reports that “migration pressures” will continue “for
the foreseeable future.” It will take “decades” to close
income gaps between developed and developing countries; in 2015, the ratio
between the average income of the high-income countries and that of the
low-income countries stood at 70:1. A “well-documented demographic
divergence” will add further pressure: “Population aging will
produce large labor-market imbalances and fiscal pressures in high-income
countries as the tax base narrows and the cost of caring for the old
surges.” This increase in demand will complement an increase in supply.
“If current fertility and national employment rates remain as they are in
the developing world,” the Bank reports, by 2050 “nearly 900
million [will be] in search of work.” Climate change and disasters will
have a more modest impact on the international level, although “increased
drought and desertification, rising sea levels, repeated crop failures, and more
intense and frequent storms are likely to increase
internal
migration.” And these numbers—measuring persons outside their home
country for more than a year—do not include hundreds of millions of
persons who cross international borders for shorter periods of time: tourists,
students, temporary workers, business persons, asylum-seekers. |
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ISSN: | 2398-7723 2398-7723 |
DOI: | 10.1017/aju.2017.8 |