GLOBAL MIGRATION IS PERMANENT
alex.c | 04.12.2008 04:42 | Analysis
Manila, December 3, 2008 – For those backroom economists and politicians eager to sanitize their economies by sending migrant labor back home the International Organization for Migration (IOM) had a nasty surprise this month: Migration is not going away and your solution is not expulsion but flexible new policies.
GLOBAL MIGRATION IS PERMANENT:
By Uli Schmetzer
www.uli-schmetzer.com
Manila, December 3, 2008 – For those backroom economists and politicians eager to sanitize their economies by sending migrant labor back home the International Organization for Migration (IOM) had a nasty surprise this month: Migration is not going away and your solution is not expulsion but flexible new policies.
In developed countries where recession has prompted industries to shave down their workforce or go bankrupt, the migrant workers are the first to be laid off or have their contracts canceled. But the hope of these labor-hosting countries that the migrant worker will then quietly go home is wishful thinking, so the experts say.
This kind of wishful thinking is misleading for nations like Italy where Silvio Berlusconi’s ruling coalition includes neo-fascist and xenophobic parties. The coalition decreed zero addition to migrant workers next year. But migration experts say that will not help Italy or anyone else because people escaping hunger, deprivation, war or persecution will simply keep coming – illegally.
Worse, those migrants who have lost their jobs might resort to dishonest ways to eke out a living.
The European Union has foreseen this phenomenon and created specially trained Border Police units whose task is to track down labor-smuggling networks and ensure, through modern technology, those caught as illegal immigrants are tagged so they can never return for a second entry attempt.
If the prospects of curtailing snowballing migration are negative for the industrialized countries the repercussions of the global recession (caused by the excesses of unfettered investment practices) is certain to cause even greater hardships among countries in which large sectors of the population are dependent on remittances from migrant workers.
Developed countries are unlikely to offer a receptive ear to the IOM plea: ‘Please keep your doors open.’ And given the current credit squeeze and economic stagnation the labor-sending nations are also unlikely to heed the IOM’s exhortation to build more industries to generate jobs that keep their citizen at home.
The IOM warns of ‘human mobility on an unprecedented global scale.’ Already forty million Chinese are abroad (2.9 per cent of the Chinese population) and twenty million Indians, 1.9 per cent of the Indian population.
Nowhere is the imminent tragedy of the world’s 200 million migrant workers more acute then in the Philippines where the so-called ‘overseas workers’ now total 8.2 million, more then ten per cent of the Philippine’s population, or one in every four adult Filipino citizen.
Amazingly Filipinos in general return to their homeland and rarely settle or integrate in foreign countries, unlike Indians and Chinese. Filipino Overseas Workers also invest their savings at home.
With remittances from abroad the main revenue earner in the Philippines any reduction in this massive overseas work force would send the country into an economic tailspin.
At the root of the Filipino exodus (by far the largest per capita) is a feudalist oligarchy which has been running the country for its own benefits but under the guise of a democracy. In this club of the rich and influential family clans the leadership rotates, the participants invent their own political parties or buy existing ones. Often they feud among themselves.
An outsider, movie star Joseph Estrada, muscled in on this ruling cartel in the 1990s. He achieved a thumping success in the presidential election on a wave of populist euphoria. But Estrada was quickly ‘defrocked’ by an orchestrated ‘peoples revolt’ backed by the Armed Forces. He was charged with corruption, a charge that has pursued every Filipino president, including Estrada’s successor Gloria Arroyo. (As Estrada’s vice-president she led the ‘revolt’ and became, not surprisingly, the next president. Now she intends to change the constitution to remain in office for another term.)
The Philippines, a democracy in which the vote has always been for sale, is not atypical of nations sending out millions of their workers (half of them women according to the IOM) to earn their keep abroad and send back the keep for their families and relatives.
Remittances from overseas allow these labor-export nations to shun social service obligations, leaving the maintenance of the poor and old to relatives sending money from abroad. Bright young political activists with degrees cannot find jobs and join the exodus, so depleting opposition to systems that perpetuate themselves.
According to the IOM total global remittances reached 337 billion dollars last year, double the money sent home in 2002.
The impact migrant labor has made on developed countries is most visible on a Sunday in Hong Kong. Then most of the 240,000 domestic workers serving Chinese families in the former British colony hold their weekly Sunday picnic in Central, covering every available space within a square mile, providing their own entertainment on a makeshift stage and setting up their own shopping malls on the one day they are allowed to have off.
Without those Filipino nannies Hong Kong families would not be able to have both spouses at work, making good salaries while paying only $300 US a month to the nannies. These exploited migrant workers have no recourse to a union or the law and are on call 24 hours a day six days a week. Many sleep under stairways or in closet-like spaces at their master’s home. Many are abused and treated like slaves.
If you ask the people of Hong Kong why they so shamelessly exploit these women they bristle with indignation and retort that without their Hong Kong jobs these women and their families would starve back home.
It is no surprise the majority of these domestic helpers, nannies, cooks and cleaning women, have their own children back in the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand, as well as husbands, parents and siblings that live off the monthly remittances from the nannies of Hong Kong, Singapore, the Middle East and the lowly paid sailors, mainly from the Philippines, manning the global merchant navies.
ends
By Uli Schmetzer
www.uli-schmetzer.com
Manila, December 3, 2008 – For those backroom economists and politicians eager to sanitize their economies by sending migrant labor back home the International Organization for Migration (IOM) had a nasty surprise this month: Migration is not going away and your solution is not expulsion but flexible new policies.
In developed countries where recession has prompted industries to shave down their workforce or go bankrupt, the migrant workers are the first to be laid off or have their contracts canceled. But the hope of these labor-hosting countries that the migrant worker will then quietly go home is wishful thinking, so the experts say.
This kind of wishful thinking is misleading for nations like Italy where Silvio Berlusconi’s ruling coalition includes neo-fascist and xenophobic parties. The coalition decreed zero addition to migrant workers next year. But migration experts say that will not help Italy or anyone else because people escaping hunger, deprivation, war or persecution will simply keep coming – illegally.
Worse, those migrants who have lost their jobs might resort to dishonest ways to eke out a living.
The European Union has foreseen this phenomenon and created specially trained Border Police units whose task is to track down labor-smuggling networks and ensure, through modern technology, those caught as illegal immigrants are tagged so they can never return for a second entry attempt.
If the prospects of curtailing snowballing migration are negative for the industrialized countries the repercussions of the global recession (caused by the excesses of unfettered investment practices) is certain to cause even greater hardships among countries in which large sectors of the population are dependent on remittances from migrant workers.
Developed countries are unlikely to offer a receptive ear to the IOM plea: ‘Please keep your doors open.’ And given the current credit squeeze and economic stagnation the labor-sending nations are also unlikely to heed the IOM’s exhortation to build more industries to generate jobs that keep their citizen at home.
The IOM warns of ‘human mobility on an unprecedented global scale.’ Already forty million Chinese are abroad (2.9 per cent of the Chinese population) and twenty million Indians, 1.9 per cent of the Indian population.
Nowhere is the imminent tragedy of the world’s 200 million migrant workers more acute then in the Philippines where the so-called ‘overseas workers’ now total 8.2 million, more then ten per cent of the Philippine’s population, or one in every four adult Filipino citizen.
Amazingly Filipinos in general return to their homeland and rarely settle or integrate in foreign countries, unlike Indians and Chinese. Filipino Overseas Workers also invest their savings at home.
With remittances from abroad the main revenue earner in the Philippines any reduction in this massive overseas work force would send the country into an economic tailspin.
At the root of the Filipino exodus (by far the largest per capita) is a feudalist oligarchy which has been running the country for its own benefits but under the guise of a democracy. In this club of the rich and influential family clans the leadership rotates, the participants invent their own political parties or buy existing ones. Often they feud among themselves.
An outsider, movie star Joseph Estrada, muscled in on this ruling cartel in the 1990s. He achieved a thumping success in the presidential election on a wave of populist euphoria. But Estrada was quickly ‘defrocked’ by an orchestrated ‘peoples revolt’ backed by the Armed Forces. He was charged with corruption, a charge that has pursued every Filipino president, including Estrada’s successor Gloria Arroyo. (As Estrada’s vice-president she led the ‘revolt’ and became, not surprisingly, the next president. Now she intends to change the constitution to remain in office for another term.)
The Philippines, a democracy in which the vote has always been for sale, is not atypical of nations sending out millions of their workers (half of them women according to the IOM) to earn their keep abroad and send back the keep for their families and relatives.
Remittances from overseas allow these labor-export nations to shun social service obligations, leaving the maintenance of the poor and old to relatives sending money from abroad. Bright young political activists with degrees cannot find jobs and join the exodus, so depleting opposition to systems that perpetuate themselves.
According to the IOM total global remittances reached 337 billion dollars last year, double the money sent home in 2002.
The impact migrant labor has made on developed countries is most visible on a Sunday in Hong Kong. Then most of the 240,000 domestic workers serving Chinese families in the former British colony hold their weekly Sunday picnic in Central, covering every available space within a square mile, providing their own entertainment on a makeshift stage and setting up their own shopping malls on the one day they are allowed to have off.
Without those Filipino nannies Hong Kong families would not be able to have both spouses at work, making good salaries while paying only $300 US a month to the nannies. These exploited migrant workers have no recourse to a union or the law and are on call 24 hours a day six days a week. Many sleep under stairways or in closet-like spaces at their master’s home. Many are abused and treated like slaves.
If you ask the people of Hong Kong why they so shamelessly exploit these women they bristle with indignation and retort that without their Hong Kong jobs these women and their families would starve back home.
It is no surprise the majority of these domestic helpers, nannies, cooks and cleaning women, have their own children back in the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand, as well as husbands, parents and siblings that live off the monthly remittances from the nannies of Hong Kong, Singapore, the Middle East and the lowly paid sailors, mainly from the Philippines, manning the global merchant navies.
ends
alex.c
Additions
The International Organisation Against Migrants
04.12.2008 12:43
The IOM describes itself as “an intergovernmental body that acts to protect the interests of
migrants.” The truth, however, is starkly different. The IOM is effectively a deportation
mechanism for migrants who are pushed into poverty and destitution by governments
immigration policies after their asylum or immigration claims are rejected.
The International Organisation Against Migrants: the truth behind the IOM
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/media/2008/06//401917.pdf
The IOM, Spies and Migrant Hunters: Campaign to Combat Global Migration Management
http://www.noborder.org/iom/index.php
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch jointly condemn IOM policies
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=243
Projects against Women Trafficking: little more for IOM than a justification to fight autonomous migration
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=141
IOM plays waiting game with Nazi slave workers
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=142
Press statement of Roma-organization on the IOM
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=89
Australia introduced what is now called the 'Pacific Solution' and paid $30 million to the Republic of Nauru, a small island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, ecologically devastated from mining phosphates, to take over a boatload of unwanted human beings. This trade was facilitated by the IOM and its Australian director Mark Getchell, which acted as a migration crisis rapid response force. Human Rights Watch accuses the Australian government of a breach of the Refugee Convention, a violation that is facilitated by the IOM. In Nauru, the Afghan refugees refused to leave the boat, IOM director Getchell was flown in by an Navy helicopter, in the end force has been used my the marines.
There are two camps on Nauru, one for the Afghan and another one for the Iraqi refugees. Topside Camp is situated in the middle of the island where all vegetation is gone, a terrible reminiscence of the Woomera camp. Both camps have been built and are run and staffed by the IOM.
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=157
migrants.” The truth, however, is starkly different. The IOM is effectively a deportation
mechanism for migrants who are pushed into poverty and destitution by governments
immigration policies after their asylum or immigration claims are rejected.
The International Organisation Against Migrants: the truth behind the IOM
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/media/2008/06//401917.pdf
The IOM, Spies and Migrant Hunters: Campaign to Combat Global Migration Management
http://www.noborder.org/iom/index.php
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch jointly condemn IOM policies
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=243
Projects against Women Trafficking: little more for IOM than a justification to fight autonomous migration
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=141
IOM plays waiting game with Nazi slave workers
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=142
Press statement of Roma-organization on the IOM
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=89
Australia introduced what is now called the 'Pacific Solution' and paid $30 million to the Republic of Nauru, a small island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, ecologically devastated from mining phosphates, to take over a boatload of unwanted human beings. This trade was facilitated by the IOM and its Australian director Mark Getchell, which acted as a migration crisis rapid response force. Human Rights Watch accuses the Australian government of a breach of the Refugee Convention, a violation that is facilitated by the IOM. In Nauru, the Afghan refugees refused to leave the boat, IOM director Getchell was flown in by an Navy helicopter, in the end force has been used my the marines.
There are two camps on Nauru, one for the Afghan and another one for the Iraqi refugees. Topside Camp is situated in the middle of the island where all vegetation is gone, a terrible reminiscence of the Woomera camp. Both camps have been built and are run and staffed by the IOM.
http://www.noborder.org/iom/display.php?id=157
One of No Borders
Comments
Hide the following 3 comments
shoutback?
04.12.2008 12:28
Reformist shit, perhaps. What do you/we mean by globalisation. It has various meanings / interpretations ramifications as does the word culture. Do you mean capitalism without borders? Destruction of communities? Gentrification? Being dispossesed is global. Who loses what job ,what land? Same capitalist wage slavery economies? What about land rights - are you going to decide who are the deserving poor and who aren't? Sustainbabilty and population - already the powerful Malthussians and the liberal green lobby have ties. Do we discuss human rights vs relativism? e.g womens rights. power relations.
From the Amazon to Dublin work migration is not revolutionary and not black and white. Environmental destruction, destruction of way of life, earning a crust - who draws the line. As wekll as fascists, anti-fascists can behave abominably. Macismo? There are more borders to travel than just nation state borders? Would people trafficking go away without nation state borders? Armies? Have a look at Iraq - see the private sector - are Nation states are subsumed to power elites ( corporate fascism ) and their armies. So many more questions. Is real resistance dead in the UK?
classification
Of course it is
04.12.2008 18:47
Stroppyoldgit
sex workers
05.12.2008 14:57
ohno
e-mail: markhood@googlemail.com