| Over the years I have learnt to
take up any offer to hold hands with the media with
a hint of trepidation. But this time around I feel
safer as the chaperone is the United Nations. And
even though not the blue helmets of the peacekeeping
force, the United Nations Population Fund grants me
enough cover to feel reasonably safe particularly as
over the years we have had a close and fruitful
co-operation relationship. We look forward to an
even closer and more productive relationship in the
face of the upcoming restructuring.
Let me at the outset congratulate the winners who
have trod the path of the finest traditions in
journalism by seeking truth including shedding light
on dark, uncomfortable areas of our society. I also
wish to congratulate our hosts, the United Nations
for encouraging the pursuit of this profession,
which plays such a significant and crucial role in
the development of our Community. This fact has been
recognised by our Heads of Government, who in 1995
accorded to media workers the right to move and work
freely within the Caribbean Community. You were
among the first to be so granted along with
university graduates.
These two categories were viewed as the vanguard
of our internal migration, as it were, to foster
integration through making available on the one hand
a larger cadre of trained human resources and on the
other a wider canvas to paint the story of
integration. This facilitation of internal migration
therefore was seen as vital to the development of
the region and as a catalyst for the success of the
then imminent CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).
Ladies and Gentlemen, the topic on which I have
been asked to elaborate, Migration and Development:
In the Context of the CARICOM Single Market and
Economy, has particular resonance at this time. The
issue of migration has loomed large on the
international stage in recent times and has been a
flash point in electoral politics on both sides of
the Atlantic. But this is not new. Two hundred years
ago, migration, forced as it was at that time, or to
use the more accurate terminology human trafficking,
having become less profitable, more divisive and
increasingly pernicious, the Europeans abolished it.
Indeed next year there will be a commemoration – not
celebration of the 200th Anniversary of the
Abolition of the Trans-Atlantic African Slave Trade
– truly one of the most pernicious of its kind in
history.
But it is not only in the arena of electoral
politics that the issue of migration has been
discussed. The parent body of our hosts tonight –
the United Nations - deemed it important enough to
hold a High-Level Dialogue on International
Migration and Development at a Special Session of
the General Assembly last September at the UN’s New
York headquarters. One hundred and twenty-seven
Member States demonstrated their interest by making
their views known on the floor at levels ranging
from a vice president through cabinet ministers and
vice-ministers.
Earlier in the year in May in Vienna, Austria,
leaders of 59 countries, 32 from Latin America and
the Caribbean and 27 from Europe, at the Fourth
Summit of the European Union, Latin America and the
Caribbean (EU/LAC Summit) shared their views on
migration and enunciated them in the Vienna
Declaration, the final document emerging from the
Summit.
In both fora, the scope and complexity of
migration were recognised as well as the potential
for migrants to be a positive force for development
in the receiving country but less so in the source
countries. Both meetings underscored the need for
the dialogue on the issue to continue at all levels,
globally and regionally as we are doing here
tonight.
International Migration That is not surprising,
given that today, the number of people who live
outside their countries of birth is estimated to be
in the area of 200 million (191 million) or three
per cent of the global population, with women
constituting almost half of all international
migrants. As the UN conference noted, people migrate
because of poverty, conflict, human rights
violations, poor governance or lack of employment,
and most recently due to environmental/health
concerns (just this morning there was a news report
that senior business executives are currently
quitting Hong Kong due to the problem of air
pollution and other environmental concerns).
Therefore it is not surprising that reports from the
UN Population Division, show that six out of every
10 international migrants live in developed
countries. Among these countries, one in every three
migrants lives in Europe and about one in every four
lives in North America.
Complex relationships between poverty and social
exclusion act as push factors while ageing
populations and employment opportunities, linked to
lower birth rates in the metropoles are among the
pull factors that serve to encourage migration.
Young people who migrate to gain access to
educational opportunities, upon completion of their
studies may seek or find employment in the host
country, leading to the concomitant loss of skills
for their country of origin. The impact of economic
globalisation, which has exacerbated the
inequalities between nations and within
nation-states, has made migration an even more
attractive option, almost in fact an economic
necessity for many. Thus, it is not envisaged that
the rate of migration would decline in the
foreseeable future.
The large majority of migrants are lawful
residents making meaningful contributions to their
host countries. Despite this, international
migration creates political, economic, and social
tensions in the countries of destination as
evidenced in recent times by the events in Europe
and in the United States.
The phenomenon of Migration is multidimensional
and it cannot easily be separated from the more
typical internationally current issues such as
market access, trade imbalances, debt
sustainability, human security and social justice.
It has historically been evident that the pace of
sustainable development in both receiving and source
countries can be influenced by migration flows.
Migration has also carried with it implications for
human rights and today can impact on the attainment
of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
The major trends in migration generally exhibit
increased demand for both high and low skilled
migrant labour; feminisation of migration, tendency
to high levels of exploitation and lack of respect
for basic human rights and dignity including
manifestations of discrimination, violence and
xenophobic hostility; trafficking and brain drain.
Indeed in Vienna, the human rights concerns were
central to the statement in the EU/LAC Declaration
and many of those who contributed to the UN
Dialogue, noted that vulnerable migrant groups such
as women and children, needed special protection. In
noting the high incidence of female migration, the
UN Dialogue acknowledged that the risk factor was
higher for women than men particularly in respect of
their exposure to exploitation and abuse.
This ugly side of migration therefore has not
escaped the attention of the global community and
both conferences – the EU/LAC and the UN - have
committed to the fight against human trafficking
with particular concern expressed over the fate of
women and children.
Regional Migration Internal and External Ladies
and Gentlemen, given the international landscape,
what about our Region? There will be hardly any
argument against the fact that this Region is one of
migrant peoples. The Europeans came and settled, the
Trans-Atlantic slave trade uprooted the Africans
from their homeland, the invidious system of
indentureship continued this process with the East
Indians, Portuguese, Javanese and Chinese. The
Middle Easterners fled from a mixture of turmoil and
economic hardship and they all landed on these
shores.
But over the last fifty years the Caribbean, with
a present population of approximately 39 million
(UNFPA, 2006), has lost more than five million
people (ECLAC, 2005) to migration and has one of the
highest net migration rates worldwide with wide
variations within the Region.
In the Caribbean, migration is motivated
primarily by economic conditions - an expression of
the individual’s will for an improvement in one’s
economic situation and for a better quality of life.
This motivation has significant social and economic
implications for the receiving country. It is the
highly skilled and educated in search of higher
wages and better employment opportunities and
conditions that are on the move worldwide. The
majority of the migrants in the most productive age
group, 20-45, generally have a high level of
education.
According to a recent International Monetary Fund
(IMF) study, almost all of the Caribbean countries
are among the top 20 countries in the world with the
highest tertiary educated emigration (out migration)
rates. Indeed another recent study showed, for
example, that in the last five years alone 80
percent of Guyana’s tertiary educated citizens have
migrated. The majority of Caribbean countries have
lost more than 50 per cent of their labour force in
the tertiary segment and more than 30 per cent in
the secondary education segment.
This virtual exodus of valuable professional
skills compromises the attainment of the region’s
broader development goals. For example, the
Caribbean is losing approximately 400 nurses per
annum through out-migration to the United Kingdom,
Canada, and the United States at the rate of roughly
1:2:10 (ECLAC, 2006). The gravity of this situation
is underscored by the costs associated with that
kind of migration, that is, the cost of training of
these migrants in their home countries, as well as
the resulting setback to the health services of the
Region.
Governments in countries such as Barbados,
Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago spend more per
capita on tertiary education than they do on primary
and secondary education. The cost of nurse training
in the Region is estimated to be between US$15 to
US$20 million per annum and thus their migration
represents a significant transfer of resources from
the Region to those beneficiary migrant receiving
countries (ECLAC, 2005). To counter the detrimental
effects of this and other similar instances, such as
teachers, there are several efforts being made to
address these labour deficiencies, through
scaling-up of training to support intra and extra-
regional demands and temporary migration schemes.
But really, as the former Prime Minister of
Jamaica the Most Honourable Percival Patterson said
in a lecture during the series to mark the 30th
Anniversary of CARICOM in 2003: “We will only stem
the tide, when we expand our economies, increase
professional and job opportunities and accentuate
social mobility fast enough to satisfy the growing
expectations of our people.”
Also the time has come, if not long past, when
the region’s governments must put squarely on the
table the principle that foreign governments be made
to pay for the capital cost of training these
professionals they now freely recruit from
developing countries.
Diaspora and Remittances As a result of the
continuous migration from the region, a formidable,
(certainly in terms of numbers) Caribbean diaspora
has evolved, primarily located in North America and
in the former colonising countries of the United
Kingdom, France, and The Netherlands. This diaspora
also includes apart from the migrants, foreign-born
persons with one or both parents of Caribbean
origin.
One positive side of this migration to the
receiving countries was recently highlighted when
the President of the United States proclaimed June
2006 as Caribbean-American Heritage Month “in
recognition of the outstanding contribution of the
Caribbean diaspora to American society”. President
George Bush in his proclamation acknowledged that
“for centuries, Caribbean Americans have enriched
our society and added to the strength of America.”
And he was not speaking only of the first Secretary
of the US Treasury, Alexander Hamilton of Nevisian
birth or of recent Secretary of State Colin Powell
of Jamaican descent.
The Caribbean diaspora also plays a vital role in
improving the quality of life in the source
countries particularly through remittances which are
generally transferred to low and middle income
families. It is estimated that about 40 per cent of
Caribbean rural households derive significant
financial support from relatives abroad. United
States Member of the House of Representatives Mr
Charles Ranghel put the annual figure of remittances
to the Caribbean at US $1.6 billion during a debate
in the House on the resolution designating
Caribbean-American Heritage Month. Such remittance
is no pittance!
The Caribbean countries rank among the top 30
countries in the world with the highest remittance
flows as a percentage of GDP. The total
international remittances are estimated to stand at
US $226 billion according to the UN Population
Division (2006). Migrants from developing countries
sent some US$167 billion in remittances to family
and friends at home (Migrants and development: a new
era Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie, 2006).
Remittance flows now exceed both Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI) inflows, as well as Official
Development Assistance (ODA) for the Region as a
whole. Remittances, which are private sources of
income that contribute to mitigating poverty, should
however not be considered a substitute, even in
part, for Overseas Development Aid.
Despite the impact of remittances at the macro
level, it is clear, according to a report from IMF
(2006), that the total losses due to skilled
emigration far outweigh the recorded remittances for
the Caribbean Region on average, and for almost all
the individual Caribbean countries.
Migration and CSME Ladies and gentlemen, the
search for better economic opportunities for many
people within the Region, often commenced
intra-regionally. This is evident by the fact that
the absolute number of foreign-born nationals
originating from the Caribbean in another Caribbean
country has steadily increased in the last two
decades. Based upon available data from 2000, about
three percent of the Caribbean population can be
considered intra-regional migrants. This varies
generally from country to country, with the lowest
percentage of Caribbean immigrants found in Jamaica
and Guyana and the highest proportions reported in
Antigua and Barbuda and the CARICOM Associate
Members. The majority of migrants originate from
Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, the Organisation of the
Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Member Countries and
Suriname.
It is expected, indeed hoped, that intra-regional
migration, will be on the rise as the Caribbean
Community, in an attempt to create a more viable
economy and society, in the face of globalisation,
establishes the CARICOM Single Market and Economy
(CSME) under the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas. The
realisation of this hope lies in large measure with
an amelioration of all its attendant administrative
woes.
Today, this expectation is particularly relevant
to twelve of the fifteen CARICOM Member States which
form the Single Market and who are expected by 2008
to be included within the framework of the Single
Economy. (The Bahamas, Haiti and Montserrat are not
yet a part) It is the elements of the Single Market,
especially Articles 45 and 46 of the Revised Treaty,
that form the framework within which migration will
take place within the CSME. I have little doubt that
this will be one of the positive factors in making
the CSME arrangements redound to the benefit of the
population.
To be specific, the Member States have committed
themselves to the “goal of free movement of their
nationals within the Community.” As a first step
towards achieving this goal, Member States have
opted to proceed on a phased basis to accord to
Community nationals the right to seek employment
(work without a work permit) in any Member State.
The first categories of nationals to have benefited
from this provision are university graduates, media
workers, sportspersons, artistes and musicians. At
the Twenty-Seventh Meeting of the Conference of
Heads of Government held in July this year in St
Kitts and Nevis, the Conference agreed to expand the
categories of skilled persons eligible for free
movement within the Community to include nurses and
teachers who were not already covered as holders of
university degrees.
Besides these categories, the Revised Treaty also
grants non-wage earning CARICOM nationals, both
juridical and natural persons, the right to move
freely in the CSME space to maximise economic
opportunities. This is enshrined through the
provisions in the Revised Treaty (Articles 34 and
37) which allow the right of establishment, that is,
the right to move and establish enterprises in
another Member State to produce goods and to provide
services. This movement from discretionary migration
to full implementation of the Treaty provisions, an
important part of the changing economic face of the
region is a work in progress.
One of the expected benefits of these measures is
the enticement of members of the diaspora to return
to their Caribbean roots and assist in the
development of the Region. Whereas previously, the
labour market or the commercial space was limited to
one’s country, CARICOM nationals now have 12 Member
States to choose from, should they wish to return
with their skills or to make an investment. In
particular, students studying abroad, on graduating,
can now return to work in the Region as of right and
not just in their country of origin. And we will
welcome them all.
Furthermore, measures are being put in place to
ensure that under the CSME, there will be the right
to equal treatment in respect of investment and
working conditions as it relates to the particular
Member State. Article 7 of the Revised Treaty
states, inter alia, that: “any discrimination on
grounds of nationality only shall be prohibited.” A
CARICOM national who decides to invest or work in
another Member State will therefore be entitled to
enjoy the same rights and conditions as those given
to nationals.
The right to settle in another Member State will
extend to the spouse and children of eligible
categories. However, the rights and benefits to
which spouses and dependents are entitled- the
so-called contingent rights - are under
consideration as directed by Article 239 of the
Revised Treaty which requires the Member States to
“elaborate a protocol” relating to those rights
among others.
To facilitate the general process of
intra-regional migration, CARICOM has agreed on and
has implemented an Agreement on Social Security to
provide for such benefits as pensions and national
insurance to be transferable.
The management of migration is a critical factor
in the operation and success of the CSME. The free
movement of skills is designed to ensure that
skilled labour responds to demands within the market
area. However, it brings with it certain challenges
for the receiving state including being able to
absorb the migrants, taking into account the demands
on their social services and infrastructure. It
therefore requires us to work towards a sufficiently
wide distribution of opportunity that would allow
for an equitable dispersal of skills and benefits.
Conclusion Every issue that has been put before
you tonight directly involves the most important
resource we have in our Caribbean community – namely
its people. It is our human resources that will both
drive development and benefit from it. The search
for a better quality of life is rooted in the
enjoyment of life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness for us and our families – no matter where
life leads us.
In closing, ladies and gentlemen, let me once
again thank my hosts for the opportunity to have
expressed the aforementioned thoughts with you this
evening on a matter that is significant, topical and
relevant globally and regionally. Finally let me
congratulate once again the winners who so adroitly
addressed the topic of Migration and Development.
May they be beacons to their peers as advocates of
the CSME and exemplars as beneficiaries thereof.
I thank you.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org
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