Publication:
The Demographic Benefit of International Migration : Hypothesis and Application to Middle Eastern and North African Contexts

dc.contributor.author Fargues, Philippe
dc.date.accessioned 2012-06-26T20:09:47Z
dc.date.available 2012-06-26T20:09:47Z
dc.date.issued 2006-11-01
dc.description.abstract The view that international migration has no impact on the size of world population is a sensible one. But the author argues, migration from developing to more industrial countries during the past decades may have resulted in a smaller world population than the one which would have been attained had no international migration taken place for two reasons: most of recent migration has been from high to low birth-rate countries, and migrants typically adopt and send back to their home countries models and ideas that prevail in host countries. Thus, migrants are potential agents of the diffusion of demographic modernity, that is, the reduction of birth rates among nonmigrant communities left behind in origin countries. This hypothesis is tested with data from Morocco and Turkey where most emigrants are bound for the West, and Egypt where they are bound for the Gulf. The demographic differentials encountered through migration in these three countries offer contrasted situations-host countries are either more (the West) or less (the Gulf) advanced in their demographic transition than the home country. Assuming migration changes the course of demographic transition in origin countries, the author posits that it should work in two opposite directions-speeding it up in Morocco and Turkey and slowing it down in Egypt. Empirical evidence confirms this hypothesis. Time series of birth rates and migrant remittances (reflecting the intensity of the relationship kept by emigrants with their home country) are strongly correlated with each other. Correlation is negative for Morocco and Turkey, and positive for Egypt. This suggests that Moroccan and Turkish emigration to Europe has been accompanied by a fundamental change of attitudes regarding marriage and birth, while Egyptian migration to the Gulf has not brought home innovative attitudes in this domain, but rather material resources for the achievement of traditional family goals. Other data suggest that emigration has fostered education in Morocco and Turkey but not in Egypt. And as has been found in the literature, education is the single most important determinant of demographic transition among nonmigrant populations in migrants' regions of origin. Two broader conclusions are drawn. First, the acceleration of the demographic transition in Morocco and Turkey is correlated with migration to Europe, a region where low birth-rates is the dominant pattern. This suggests that international migration may have produced a global demographic benefit under the form of a relaxation of demographic pressures for the world as a whole. Second, if it turns out that emigrants are conveyors of new ideas in matters related with family and education, then the same may apply to a wider range of civil behavior. en
dc.identifier http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/11/7155097/demographic-benefit-international-migration-hypothesis-application-middle-eastern-north-african-contexts
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9287
dc.language English
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4050
dc.rights CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder World Bank
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.subject AGE AT MARRIAGE
dc.subject ALIENS
dc.subject AUTONOMY
dc.subject BASIC NEEDS
dc.subject BIRTH CONTROL
dc.subject BIRTH RATE
dc.subject BIRTH RATES
dc.subject BORDERS
dc.subject BRAIN DRAIN
dc.subject CHILDBEARING
dc.subject CHILDREN PER WOMAN
dc.subject CHOICE OF PARTNER
dc.subject CITIZENS
dc.subject CONTRACEPTION
dc.subject COUNTRIES OF DEPARTURE
dc.subject COUNTRIES OF DESTINATION
dc.subject COUNTRIES OF ORIGIN
dc.subject COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
dc.subject CULTURAL CONTEXT
dc.subject CULTURAL MODELS
dc.subject DEATH RATES
dc.subject DECLINE OF FERTILITY
dc.subject DECLINES IN FERTILITY
dc.subject DEMOCRACY
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHERS
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC IMPACT
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC PRESSURES
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS
dc.subject DEMOGRAPHY
dc.subject DEPENDENCE
dc.subject DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
dc.subject DOWRY
dc.subject DYING
dc.subject EARLY MARRIAGE
dc.subject EDUCATION
dc.subject EDUCATION OF CHILDREN
dc.subject EMIGRANTS
dc.subject EMIGRATION
dc.subject EXPATRIATES
dc.subject EXTERNAL MIGRATION
dc.subject FAMILY REUNIFICATION
dc.subject FAMILY SIZE
dc.subject FEMALE EDUCATION
dc.subject FERTILITY
dc.subject FERTILITY DECLINE
dc.subject FERTILITY DIFFERENTIALS
dc.subject FERTILITY RATE
dc.subject FERTILITY RATES
dc.subject FERTILITY SURVEY
dc.subject FERTILITY TRANSITION
dc.subject FORECASTING
dc.subject GENDER
dc.subject HEALTH
dc.subject HEALTH CARE
dc.subject HOME COUNTRIES
dc.subject HOST COUNTRIES
dc.subject HOST POPULATION
dc.subject HOST SOCIETY
dc.subject HOUSEHOLD INCOME
dc.subject HOUSEHOLDS
dc.subject HUMAN CAPITAL
dc.subject HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject HUMAN POPULATIONS
dc.subject HUSBANDS
dc.subject IMMIGRANT
dc.subject IMMIGRANTS
dc.subject IMMIGRATION
dc.subject IMPACT OF MIGRATION
dc.subject INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
dc.subject INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS
dc.subject INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
dc.subject LABOR FORCE
dc.subject LABOR MIGRANTS
dc.subject LABOR MIGRATION
dc.subject LARGER FAMILIES
dc.subject LEVEL OF EDUCATION
dc.subject LEVEL OF FERTILITY
dc.subject LEVELS OF FERTILITY
dc.subject LIVING CONDITIONS
dc.subject LOCAL COMMUNITY
dc.subject LOWER BIRTH RATES
dc.subject LOWER FERTILITY
dc.subject MARRIED WOMEN
dc.subject MASS EDUCATION
dc.subject MATERIAL RESOURCES
dc.subject MEDIA
dc.subject MIDDLE EASTERN
dc.subject MIGRANT
dc.subject MIGRANT POPULATIONS
dc.subject MIGRANTS
dc.subject MIGRATION FLOWS
dc.subject MIGRATION STATISTICS
dc.subject MIGRATIONS
dc.subject MOBILITY
dc.subject MODERNIZATION
dc.subject MORTALITY
dc.subject NATIONAL BOUNDARIES
dc.subject NATIONAL POPULATION
dc.subject NATIONAL POPULATIONS
dc.subject NUMBER OF CHILDREN
dc.subject OVERPOPULATION
dc.subject PARENTS
dc.subject POINT OF DEPARTURE
dc.subject POLICY RESEARCH
dc.subject POLICY RESEARCH DIVISION
dc.subject POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
dc.subject POPULATION
dc.subject POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject POPULATION CENSUS
dc.subject POPULATION CHANGE
dc.subject POPULATION COUNCIL
dc.subject POPULATION DATA
dc.subject POPULATION DATA COLLECTION
dc.subject POPULATION DENSITY
dc.subject POPULATION FORECASTING
dc.subject POPULATION MIGRATION
dc.subject POPULATION MOVEMENTS
dc.subject POPULATION POLICY
dc.subject POPULATION PROJECTIONS
dc.subject PROCREATION
dc.subject PROGRESS
dc.subject RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
dc.subject RATE OF GROWTH
dc.subject RATE OF MIGRATION
dc.subject REMITTANCES
dc.subject REPRODUCTION
dc.subject REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR
dc.subject RESPECT
dc.subject RETURNEES
dc.subject SEX
dc.subject SEX PREFERENCE
dc.subject SEX RATIO
dc.subject SOCIAL GROUPS
dc.subject SOCIAL SCIENCE
dc.subject SOCIAL UPHEAVAL
dc.subject SOCIETIES
dc.subject STATE POLICIES
dc.subject TRADITIONAL FAMILY
dc.subject URBANIZATION
dc.subject WAR
dc.subject WELFARE STATE
dc.subject WORLD POPULATION
dc.subject YOUNG GIRLS
dc.subject YOUTH
dc.title The Demographic Benefit of International Migration : Hypothesis and Application to Middle Eastern and North African Contexts en
dspace.entity.type Publication
okr.crosscuttingsolutionarea Gender
okr.doctype Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
okr.doctype Publications & Research
okr.docurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/11/7155097/demographic-benefit-international-migration-hypothesis-application-middle-eastern-north-african-contexts
okr.globalpractice Social, Urban, Rural and Resilience
okr.globalpractice Health, Nutrition, and Population
okr.identifier.doi 10.1596/1813-9450-4050
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum 000016406_20061025142745
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum 7155097
okr.identifier.report WPS4050
okr.language.supported en
okr.pdfurl http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2006/10/25/000016406_20061025142745/Rendered/PDF/wps4050.pdf en
okr.region.administrative Middle East and North Africa
okr.topic Culture and Development :: Anthropology
okr.topic Social Development :: Voluntary and Involuntary Resettlement
okr.topic Human Migrations and Resettlements
okr.topic Health, Nutrition and Population :: Population Policies
okr.topic Gender :: Gender and Social Development
okr.topic Communities and Human Settlements
okr.topic Health, Nutrition and Population
okr.unit Development Research Group (DECRG)
okr.volume 1 of 1
relation.isSeriesOfPublication 26e071dc-b0bf-409c-b982-df2970295c87
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