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Wikipedia

Immigration

Immigration is the international movement of people to a destination country of which they are not natives or where they do not possess citizenship in order to settle as permanent residents or naturalized citizens.[1][2][3] Commuters, tourists, and other short-term stays in a destination country do not fall under the definition of immigration or migration; seasonal labour immigration is sometimes included, however.

Net migration rates for 2016: net immigration (blue), net emigration (orange), stable (green), and no data (gray)

As for economic effects, research suggests that migration is beneficial both to the receiving and sending countries.[4][5][6] Research, with few exceptions, finds that immigration on average has positive economic effects on the native population, but is mixed as to whether low-skilled immigration adversely affects low-skilled natives.[7][8][9][10][11] Studies show that the elimination of barriers to migration would have profound effects on world GDP, with estimates of gains ranging between 67 and 147 percent for the scenarios in which 37 to 53 percent of the developing countries' workers migrate to the developed countries.[12][13][14][15] Development economists argue that reducing barriers to labor mobility between developing countries and developed countries would be one of the most efficient tools of poverty reduction.[16][17][18][19] Positive net immigration can soften the demographic dilemma in the aging global North.[20][21]

The academic literature provides mixed findings for the relationship between immigration and crime worldwide, but finds for the United States that immigration either has no impact on the crime rate or that it reduces the crime rate.[22][23] Research shows that country of origin matters for speed and depth of immigrant assimilation, but that there is considerable assimilation overall for both first- and second-generation immigrants.[24][25]

Research has found extensive evidence of discrimination against foreign born and minority populations in criminal justice, business, the economy, housing, health care, media, and politics in the United States and Europe.[26][27][28][29]

History

The term immigration was coined in the 17th century, referring to non-warlike population movements between the emerging nation states.

When people cross national borders during their migration, they are called migrants or immigrants (from Latin: migrare, 'wanderer') from the perspective of the destination country. In contrast, from the perspective of the country from which they leave, they are called emigrants or outmigrants.[30]

Statistics

 
The global population of immigrants has grown since 1990 but has remained constant at around 3% of the world's population.[31]

As of 2015, the number of international migrants has reached 244 million worldwide, which reflects a 41% increase since 2000. One third of the world's international migrants are living in just 20 countries. The largest number of international migrants live in the United States, with 19% of the world's total. Germany and Russia host 12 million migrants each, taking the second and third place in countries with the most migrants worldwide. Saudi Arabia hosts 10 million migrants, followed by the United Kingdom (9 million) and the United Arab Emirates (8 million).[32]

In most parts of the world, migration occurs between countries that are located within the same major area. Between 2000 and 2015, Asia added more international migrants than any other major area in the world, gaining 26 million. Europe added the second largest with about 20 million.[32]

In 2015, the number of international migrants below the age of 20 reached 37 million, while 177 million are between the ages of 20 and 64. International migrants living in Africa were the youngest, with a median age of 29, followed by Asia (35 years), and Latin America/Caribbean (36 years), while migrants were older in Northern America (42 years), Europe (43 years), and Oceania (44 years).[32]

 
The number of migrants and migrant workers per country in 2015

Nearly half (43%) of all international migrants originate in Asia, and Europe was the birthplace of the second largest number of migrants (25%), followed by Latin America (15%). India has the largest diaspora in the world (16 million people), followed by Mexico (12 million) and Russia (11 million).[32]

2012 survey

A 2012 survey by Gallup found that given the opportunity, 640 million adults would migrate to another country, with 23% of these would-be immigrant choosing the United States as their desired future residence, while 7% of respondents, representing 45 million people, would choose the United Kingdom. Canada, France, Saudi Arabia, Australia, Germany, Spain, Italy, and the United Arab Emirates made up the rest of the top ten desired destination countries.[33]

Push and pull factors of immigration

 
The largest Vietnamese market in Prague, also known as "Little Hanoi". In 2009, there were about 70,000 Vietnamese in the Czech Republic.[34]
 
London has become multiethnic as a result of immigration.[35] In London in 2008, Black British and British Asian children outnumbered white British children by about 3 to 2 in government-run schools.[36]

One theory of immigration distinguishes between push and pull factors, referring to the economic, political, and social influences by which people migrate from or to specific countries.[37] Immigrants are motivated to leave their former countries of citizenship, or habitual residence, for a variety of reasons, including: a lack of local access to resources, a desire for economic prosperity, to find or engage in paid work, to better their standard of living, family reunification, retirement, climate or environmentally induced migration, exile, escape from prejudice, conflict or natural disaster, or simply the wish to change one's quality of life. Commuters, tourists, and other short-term stays in a destination country do not fall under the definition of immigration or migration; seasonal labour immigration is sometimes included, however.

Push factors (or determinant factors) refer primarily to the motive for leaving one's country of origin (either voluntarily or involuntarily), whereas pull factors (or attraction factors) refer to one's motivations behind or the encouragement towards immigrating to a particular country.

In the case of economic migration (usually labor migration), differentials in wage rates are common. If the value of wages in the new country surpasses the value of wages in one's native country, he or she may choose to migrate, as long as the costs are not too high. Particularly in the 19th century, economic expansion of the US increased immigrant flow, and nearly 15% of the population was foreign born,[38] thus making up a significant amount of the labor force.

As transportation technology improved, travel time, and costs decreased dramatically between the 18th and early 20th century. Travel across the Atlantic used to take up to 5 weeks in the 18th century, but around the time of the 20th century it took a mere 8 days.[39] When the opportunity cost is lower, the immigration rates tend to be higher.[39] Escape from poverty (personal or for relatives staying behind) is a traditional push factor, and the availability of jobs is the related pull factor. Natural disasters can amplify poverty-driven migration flows. Research shows that for middle-income countries, higher temperatures increase emigration rates to urban areas and to other countries. For low-income countries, higher temperatures reduce emigration.[40]

Emigration and immigration are sometimes mandatory in a contract of employment: religious missionaries and employees of transnational corporations, international non-governmental organizations, and the diplomatic service expect, by definition, to work "overseas". They are often referred to as "expatriates", and their conditions of employment are typically equal to or better than those applying in the host country (for similar work).[citation needed]

Non-economic push factors include persecution (religious and otherwise), frequent abuse, bullying, oppression, ethnic cleansing, genocide, risks to civilians during war, and social marginalization.[41] Political motives traditionally motivate refugee flows; for instance, people may emigrate in order to escape a dictatorship.[42]

Some migration is for personal reasons, based on a relationship (e.g. to be with family or a partner), such as in family reunification or transnational marriage (especially in the instance of a gender imbalance). Recent research has found gender, age, and cross-cultural differences in the ownership of the idea to immigrate.[43] In a few cases, an individual may wish to immigrate to a new country in a form of transferred patriotism. Evasion of criminal justice (e.g., avoiding arrest) is a personal motivation. This type of emigration and immigration is not normally legal, if a crime is internationally recognized, although criminals may disguise their identities or find other loopholes to evade detection. For example, there have been reports of war criminals disguising themselves as victims of war or conflict and then pursuing asylum in a different country.[44][45][46]

Barriers to immigration come not only in legal form or political form; natural and social barriers to immigration can also be very powerful. Immigrants when leaving their country also leave everything familiar: their family, friends, support network, and culture. They also need to liquidate their assets, and they incur the expense of moving. When they arrive in a new country, this is often with many uncertainties including finding work,[47] where to live, new laws, new cultural norms, language or accent issues, possible racism, and other exclusionary behavior towards them and their family.[48][49][50]

 
The Iron Curtain in Europe was designed as a means of preventing emigration. "It is one of the ironies of post-war European history that, once the freedom to travel for Europeans living under communist regimes, which had long been demanded by the West, was finally granted in 1989/90, travel was very soon afterwards made much more difficult by the West itself, and new barriers were erected to replace the Iron Curtain." —Anita Böcker[51]

The politics of immigration have become increasingly associated with other issues, such as national security and terrorism, especially in western Europe, with the presence of Islam as a new major religion. Those with security concerns cite the 2005 French riots and point to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy as examples of the value conflicts arising from immigration of Muslims in Western Europe. Because of all these associations, immigration has become an emotional political issue in many European nations.[52][53]

Studies have suggested that some special interest groups lobby for less immigration for their own group and more immigration for other groups since they see effects of immigration, such as increased labor competition, as detrimental when affecting their own group but beneficial when impacting other groups. A 2010 European study suggested that "employers are more likely to be pro-immigration than employees, provided that immigrants are thought to compete with employees who are already in the country. Or else, when immigrants are thought to compete with employers rather than employees, employers are more likely to be anti-immigration than employees."[54] A 2011 study examining the voting of US representatives on migration policy suggests that "representatives from more skilled labor abundant districts are more likely to support an open immigration policy towards the unskilled, whereas the opposite is true for representatives from more unskilled labor abundant districts."[55]

Another contributing factor may be lobbying by earlier immigrants. The chairman for the US Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform—which lobby for more permissive rules for immigrants, as well as special arrangements just for Irish people—has stated that "the Irish Lobby will push for any special arrangement it can get—'as will every other ethnic group in the country.'"[56][57]

Economic migrant

 
The Indo-Bangladeshi barrier in 2007. India is building a separation barrier along the 4,000 kilometer border with Bangladesh to prevent illegal immigration.

The term economic migrant refers to someone who has travelled from one region to another region for the purposes of seeking employment and an improvement in quality of life and access to resources. An economic migrant is distinct from someone who is a refugee fleeing persecution.

Many countries have immigration and visa restrictions that prohibit a person entering the country for the purposes of gaining work without a valid work visa. As a violation of a State's immigration laws a person who is declared to be an economic migrant can be refused entry into a country.

The World Bank estimates that remittances totaled $420 billion in 2009, of which $317 billion went to developing countries.[58]

Laws and ethics

 
UNHCR tents at a refugee camp following episodes of anti-immigrant violence in South Africa, 2008

Legislation regarding the protection of rights of immigrants and equal access to justice differs per nation. International law -- the product of the United Nations and other multinational organizations -- creates protocols governing immigrant rights. International law and the European Convention of Human Rights state that immigrants can only be detained for ‘legitimate aims’ of the state. It also notes that vulnerable people should be protected from unreasonable punishment and lengthy detention. International law outlines requirements for due process and suitable conditions. However, nations are sovereign, and the protocols of international law cannot be enforced upon them. Nations have the freedom to handle immigrants as they choose, and to structure how any legal aid is distributed. Human rights organizations strongly criticize individual nation-states for the limitations of their immigration policies and practices.[59]

 
 
Entry (top) and Exit (bottom) passport stamps issued to a citizen of Germany by Indian immigration authorities at New Delhi airport.

Treatment of migrants in host countries, both by governments, employers, and original population, is a topic of continual debate and criticism, and the violation of migrant human rights is an ongoing crisis.[60] The United Nations Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, has been ratified by 48 states, most of which are heavy exporters of cheap labor. Major migrant-receiving countries and regions—including Western Europe, North America, Pacific Asia, Australia, and the Gulf States—have not ratified the convention, even though they are host to the majority of international migrant workers.[61][62] Although freedom of movement is often recognized as a civil right in many documents such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966), the freedom only applies to movement within national borders and the ability to return to one's home state.[63][64]

Some proponents of immigration argue that the freedom of movement both within and between countries is a basic human right, and that the restrictive immigration policies, typical of nation-states, violate this human right of freedom of movement.[65] Such arguments are common among ideologies like anarchism and libertarianism.[66][67] As philosopher and open borders activist Jacob Appel has written, "Treating human beings differently, simply because they were born on the opposite side of a national boundary, is hard to justify under any mainstream philosophical, religious or ethical theory."[citation needed]

Where immigration is permitted, it is typically selective. As of 2003, family reunification accounted for approximately two-thirds of legal immigration to the US every year.[68] Ethnic selection, such as the White Australia policy, has generally disappeared, but priority is usually given to the educated, skilled, and wealthy. Less privileged individuals, including the mass of poor people in low-income countries, cannot avail themselves of the legal and protected immigration opportunities offered by wealthy states. This inequality has also been criticized as conflicting with the principle of equal opportunities. The fact that the door is closed for the unskilled, while at the same time many developed countries have a huge demand for unskilled labor, is a major factor in illegal immigration. The contradictory nature of this policy—which specifically disadvantages the unskilled immigrants while exploiting their labor—has also been criticized on ethical grounds.[citation needed]

Immigration policies which selectively grant freedom of movement to targeted individuals are intended to produce a net economic gain for the host country. They can also mean net loss for a poor donor country through the loss of the educated minority—a "brain drain". This can exacerbate the global inequality in standards of living that provided the motivation for the individual to migrate in the first place. One example of competition for skilled labour is active recruitment of health workers from developing countries by developed countries.[69][70] There may however also be a "brain gain" to emigration, as migration opportunities lead to greater investments in education in developing countries.[71][72][73][74] Overall, research suggests that migration is beneficial both to the receiving and sending countries.[5]

Economic effects

A survey of leading economists shows a consensus behind the view that high-skilled immigration makes the average American better off.[75] A survey of the same economists also shows support behind the notion that low-skilled immigration makes the average American better off and makes many low-skilled American workers substantially worse off unless they are compensated by others.[76] A survey of European economists shows a consensus that freer movement of people to live and work across borders within Europe makes the average European better off, and strong support behind the notion that it has not made low-skilled Europeans worse off.[9] According to David Card, Christian Dustmann, and Ian Preston, "most existing studies of the economic impacts of immigration suggest these impacts are small, and on average benefit the native population" .[7] In a survey of the existing literature, Örn B Bodvarsson and Hendrik Van den Berg write, "a comparison of the evidence from all the studies... makes it clear that, with very few exceptions, there is no strong statistical support for the view held by many members of the public, mainly that immigration has an adverse effect on native-born workers in the destination country."[77]

Overall economic prosperity

Whereas the impact on the average native tends to be small and positive, studies show more mixed results for low-skilled natives, but whether the effects are positive or negative, they tend to be small either way.[78][79][80][81][82][83][84][85][86][87][88][89][90][91][92][93][94][95][96][97][98][99][100][101][102][103][104][105][106][107][excessive citations] Research indicates that immigrants are more likely to work in risky jobs than U.S.-born workers, partly due to differences in average characteristics, such as immigrants' lower English language ability and educational attainment.[108] According to a 2017 survey of the existing economic literature, studies on high-skilled migrants "rarely find adverse wage and employment consequences, and longer time horizons tend to show greater gains".[109]

Competition from immigrants in a particular profession may aggravate underemployment in that profession,[110] but increase wages for other natives;[109] for instance, a 2017 study in Science found that "the influx of foreign-born computer scientists since the early 1990s... increased the size of the US IT sector... benefited consumers via lower prices and more efficient products... raised overall worker incomes by 0.2 to 0.3% but decreased wages of U.S. computer scientists by 2.6 to 5.1%."[111] A 2019 study found that foreign college workers in STEM occupations did not displace native college workers in STEM occupations, but instead had a positive impact on the latter group's wages.[112] A 2021 study similarly found that highly educated immigrants to Switzerland caused wages to increase for highly educated Swiss natives.[113] A 2019 study found that greater immigration led to less off-shoring by firms.[114]

Research also suggests that diversity and immigration have a net positive effect on productivity[115][116][117][94][118][119] and economic prosperity.[120][121][122][123][124] Immigration has also been associated with reductions in offshoring.[119] A study found that the Age of Mass Migration (1850–1920) contributed to "higher incomes, higher productivity, more innovation, and more industrialization" in the short-run and "higher incomes, less poverty, less unemployment, higher rates of urbanization, and greater educational attainment" in the long-run for the United States.[125] Research also shows that migration to Latin America during the Age of Mass Migration had a positive impact on long-run economic development.[126]

Studies show that the elimination of barriers to migration would have profound effects on world GDP, with estimates of gains ranging between 67 and 147.3%.[12][13][14][127][128][129] Research also finds that migration leads to greater trade in goods and services,[130][131][132][133][134] and increases in financial flows between the sending and receiving countries.[135][136] Using 130 years of data on historical migrations to the United States, one study finds "that a doubling of the number of residents with ancestry from a given foreign country relative to the mean increases by 4.2 percentage points the probability that at least one local firm invests in that country, and increases by 31% the number of employees at domestic recipients of FDI from that country. The size of these effects increases with the ethnic diversity of the local population, the geographic distance to the origin country, and the ethno-linguistic fractionalization of the origin country."[137] A 2017 study found that "immigrants' genetic diversity is significantly positively correlated with measures of U.S. counties' economic development [during the Age of Mass Migration]. There exists also a significant positive relationship between immigrants' genetic diversity in 1870 and contemporaneous measures of U.S. counties' average income."[138]

Some research suggests that immigration can offset some of the adverse effects of automation on native labor outcomes.[139][140] By increasing overall demand, immigrants could push natives out of low-skilled manual labor into better paying occupations.[139][140] A 2018 study in the American Economic Review found that the Bracero program (which allowed almost half a million Mexican workers to do seasonal farm labor in the United States) did not have any adverse impact on the labor market outcomes of American-born farm workers.[141] A 2019 study by economic historians found that immigration restrictions implemented in the 1920s had an adverse impact on US-born workers' earnings.[142]

A 2016 paper by University of Southern Denmark and University of Copenhagen economists found that the 1924 immigration restrictions enacted in the United States impaired the economy.[143][144]

Inequality

Overall immigration was found to account for a relatively small share of the rise of native wage inequality,[145][146] but low-skill immigration has been linked to greater income inequality in the native population.[147][148] Greater openness to low-skilled immigration in wealthy countries would drastically reduce global income inequality.[148][149]

Fiscal effects

A 2011 literature review of the economic impacts of immigration found that the net fiscal impact of migrants varies across studies but that the most credible analyses typically find small and positive fiscal effects on average.[82] According to the authors, "the net social impact of an immigrant over his or her lifetime depends substantially and in predictable ways on the immigrant's age at arrival, education, reason for migration, and similar".[82] According to a 2007 literature review by the Congressional Budget Office, "Over the past two decades, most efforts to estimate the fiscal impact of immigration in the United States have concluded that, in aggregate and over the long term, tax revenues of all types generated by immigrants—both legal and unauthorized—exceed the cost of the services they use."[150] A 2022 study found that the sharp reduction in refugee admissions adversely affected public coffers at all levels of government in the United States.[151]

A 2018 study found that inflows of asylum seekers into Western Europe from 1985 to 2015 had a net positive fiscal impact.[152][153] Research has shown that EU immigrants made a net positive fiscal contribution to Denmark[154] and the United Kingdom.[155][100] A 2017 study found that when Romanian and Bulgarian immigrants to the United Kingdom gained permission to acquire welfare benefits in 2014 that it had no discernible impact on the immigrants' use of welfare benefits.[156] A paper by a group of French economists found that over the period 1980–2015, "international migration had a positive impact on the economic and fiscal performance of OECD countries."[157]

Impact of refugees

A 2017 survey of leading economists found that 34% of economists agreed with the statement "The influx of refugees into Germany beginning in the summer of 2015 will generate net economic benefits for German citizens over the succeeding decade", whereas 38% were uncertain and 6% disagreed.[158] Studies of refugees' impact on native welfare are scant but the existing literature shows mixed results (negative, positive and no significant effects on native welfare).[79][159][160][161][162][163][164][165][166][167][168][169][170][171][172][95][78][173][174][excessive citations] According to economist Michael Clemens, "when economists have studied past influxes of refugees and migrants they have found the labor market effects, while varied, are very limited, and can in fact be positive."[175] A 2018 study in the Economic Journal found that Vietnamese refugees to the United States had a positive impact on American exports, as exports to Vietnam grew most in US states with larger Vietnamese populations.[134] A 2018 study in the journal Science Advances found that asylum seekers entering Western Europe in the period 1985–2015 had a positive macroeconomic and fiscal impact.[152][153] A 2019 study found that the mass influx of 1.3 million Syrian refugees to Jordan (total population: 6.6 million) did not have harm the labor market outcomes of native Jordanians.[167] A 2020 study found that Syrian refugees to Turkey improved the productivity of Turkish firms.[176]

A 2017 paper by Evans and Fitzgerald found that refugees to the United States pay "$21,000 more in taxes than they receive in benefits over their first 20 years in the U.S."[173] An internal study by the Department of Health and Human Services under the Trump administration, which was suppressed and not shown to the public, found that refugees to the United States brought in $63 billion more in government revenues than they cost the government.[177] According to University of California, Davis, labor economist Giovanni Peri, the existing literature suggests that there are no economic reasons why the American labor market could not easily absorb 100,000 Syrian refugees in a year.[citation needed] A 2017 paper looking at the long-term impact of refugees on the American labor market over the period 1980–2010 found "that there is no adverse long-run impact of refugees on the U.S. labor market."[178] A 2022 study by economist Michael Clemens found that the sharp reduction in refugee admissions in the United States since 2017 had cost the U.S. economy over $9.1 billion per year and cost public coffers over $2 billion per year.[151]

Refugees integrate more slowly into host countries' labor markets than labor migrants, in part due to the loss and depreciation of human capital and credentials during the asylum procedure.[179] Refugees tend to do worse in economic terms than natives, even when they have the same skills and language proficiencies of natives. For instance, a 2013 study of Germans in West-Germany who had been displaced from Eastern Europe during and after World War II showed that the forced German migrants did far worse economically than their native West-German counterparts decades later.[180] Second-generation forced German migrants also did worse in economic terms than their native counterparts.[180] A study of refugees to the United States found that "refugees that enter the U.S. before age 14 graduate high school and enter college at the same rate as natives. Refugees that enter as older teenagers have lower attainment with much of the difference attributable to language barriers and because many in this group are not accompanied by a parent to the U.S."[173] Refugees that entered the U.S. at ages 18–45, have "much lower levels of education and poorer language skills than natives and outcomes are initially poor with low employment, high welfare use and low earnings."[173] But the authors of the study find that "outcomes improve considerably as refugees age."[173]

A 2017 study found that the 0.5 million Portuguese who returned to Portugal from Mozambique and Angola in the mid-1970s lowered labor productivity and wages.[181] A 2018 paper found that the areas in Greece that took on a larger share of Greek Orthodox refugees from the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922 "have today higher earnings, higher levels of household wealth, greater educational attainment, as well as larger financial and manufacturing sectors."[182]

Impact of undocumented immigrants

Research on the economic effects of undocumented immigrants is scant but existing studies suggests that the effects are positive for the native population,[183][184] and public coffers.[150][185] A 2015 study shows that "increasing deportation rates and tightening border control weakens low-skilled labor markets, increasing unemployment of native low-skilled workers. Legalization, instead, decreases the unemployment rate of low-skilled natives and increases income per native."[81] Studies show that legalization of undocumented immigrants would boost the U.S. economy; a 2013 study found that granting legal status to undocumented immigrants would raise their incomes by a quarter (increasing U.S. GDP by approximately $1.4 trillion over a ten-year period),[186] and a 2016 study found that "legalization would increase the economic contribution of the unauthorized population by about 20%, to 3.6% of private-sector GDP."[187] A 2018 National Bureau of Economic Research paper found that undocumented immigrants to the United States "generate higher surplus for US firms relative to natives, hence restricting their entry has a depressing effect on job creation and, in turn, on native labor markets."[188]

In the US the Immigration Reform and Control Act was passed to help remove the illegal aliens. They were trying to do this by granting legal status or by imposing penalties against the employers who would knowingly work illegal immigrants. However, IRCA did not address the reality or price which caused an issue in the accomplishing of the objectives.[189]

A 2017 study in the Journal of Public Economics found that more intense immigration enforcement increased the likelihood that US-born children with undocumented immigrant parents would live in poverty.[190]

A paper by Spanish economists found that upon legalizing the undocumented immigrant population in Spain, the fiscal revenues increased by around €4,189 per newly legalized immigrant.[185] The paper found that the wages of the newly legalized immigrants increased after legalization, some low-skilled natives had worse labor market outcomes and high-skilled natives had improved labor market outcomes.[185]

A 2018 study found no evidence that apprehensions of undocumented immigrants in districts in the United States improved the labor market outcomes for American natives.[191] A 2020 study found that immigration enforcement in the US leads to declining production in the US dairy industry and that dairy operators respond to immigration enforcement by automating their operations (rather than hire new labor).[192]

A 2021 study in the American Economic Journal found that undocumented immigrants had beneficial effects on the employment and wages of American natives. Stricter immigration enforcement adversely affected employment and wages of American natives.[193]

Impact on the sending countries

Research suggests that migration is beneficial both to the receiving and sending countries.[5][6] According to one study, welfare increases in both types of countries: "welfare impact of observed levels of migration is substantial, at about 5% to 10% for the main receiving countries and about 10% in countries with large incoming remittances".[5] According to Branko Milanović, country of residency is by far the most important determinant of global income inequality, which suggests that the reduction in labor barriers would significantly reduce global income inequality.[16][194] A study of equivalent workers in the United States and 42 developing countries found that "median wage gap for a male, unskilled (9 years of schooling), 35-year-old, urban formal sector worker born and educated in a developing country is P$15,400 per year at purchasing power parity".[195] A 2014 survey of the existing literature on emigration finds that a 10 percent emigrant supply shock would increase wages in the sending country by 2–5.5%.[17]

Remittances increase living standards in the country of origin. Remittances are a large share of the GDP of many developing countries.[196] A study on remittances to Mexico found that remittances lead to a substantial increase in the availability of public services in Mexico, surpassing government spending in some localities.[197]

Research finds that emigration and low migration barriers has net positive effects on human capital formation in the sending countries.[71][72][73][74] This means that there is a "brain gain" instead of a "brain drain" to emigration. Emigration has also been linked to innovation in cases where the migrants return to their home country after developing skills abroad.[198][199]

One study finds that sending countries benefit indirectly in the long-run on the emigration of skilled workers because those skilled workers are able to innovate more in developed countries, which the sending countries are able to benefit on as a positive externality. Greater emigration of skilled workers consequently leads to greater economic growth and welfare improvements in the long-run.[200] The negative effects of high-skill emigration remain largely unfounded. According to economist Michael Clemens, it has not been shown that restrictions on high-skill emigration reduce shortages in the countries of origin.[201]

Research also suggests that emigration, remittances and return migration can have a positive impact on political institutions and democratization in the country of origin.[202][203][204][205][206][207][208][209][210][211][212] According to Abel Escribà-Folch, Joseph Wright, and Covadonga Meseguer, remittances "provide resources that make political opposition possible, and they decrease government dependency, undermining the patronage strategies underpinning authoritarianism."[202] Research also shows that remittances can lower the risk of civil war in the country of origin.[213]

Research suggests that emigration causes an increase in the wages of those who remain in the country of origin. A 2014 survey of the existing literature on emigration finds that a 10 percent emigrant supply shock would increase wages in the sending country by 2–5.5%.[17] A study of emigration from Poland shows that it led to a slight increase in wages for high- and medium-skilled workers for remaining Poles.[214] A 2013 study finds that emigration from Eastern Europe after the 2004 EU enlargement increased the wages of remaining young workers in the country of origin by 6%, while it had no effect on the wages of old workers.[215] The wages of Lithuanian men increased as a result of post-EU enlargement emigration.[216] Return migration is associated with greater household firm revenues.[217] Emigration leads to boosts in foreign direct investment to their home country.[218]

Some research shows that the remittance effect is not strong enough to make the remaining natives in countries with high emigration flows better off.[5]

Impact on global poverty

According to economists Michael Clemens and Lant Pritchett, "permitting people to move from low-productivity places to high-productivity places appears to be by far the most efficient generalized policy tool, at the margin, for poverty reduction".[18] A successful two-year in situ anti-poverty program, for instance, helps poor people make in a year what is the equivalent of working one day in the developed world.[18] A slight reduction in the barriers to labor mobility between the developing and developed world would do more to reduce poverty in the developing world than any remaining trade liberalization.[219]

Research on a migration lottery allowing Tongans to move to New Zealand found that the lottery winners saw a 263% increase in income from migrating (after only one year in New Zealand) relative to the unsuccessful lottery entrants.[220] A longer-term study on the Tongan lottery winners finds that they "continue to earn almost 300 percent more than non-migrants, have better mental health, live in households with more than 250 percent higher expenditure, own more vehicles, and have more durable assets".[221] A conservative estimate of their lifetime gain to migration is NZ$315,000 in net present value terms (approximately US$237,000).[221]

A 2017 study of Mexican immigrant households in the United States found that by virtue of moving to the United States, the households increase their incomes more than fivefold immediately.[222] The study also found that the "average gains accruing to migrants surpass those of even the most successful current programs of economic development."[222]

A 2017 study of European migrant workers in the UK shows that upon accession to the EU, the migrant workers see a substantial positive impact on their earnings. The data indicate that acquiring EU status raises earnings for the workers by giving them the right to freely change jobs.[223]

A 2017 study in the Quarterly Journal of Economics found that immigrants from middle- and low-income countries to the United States increased their wages by a factor of two to three upon migration.[224]

Innovation and entrepreneurship

A 2017 survey of the existing economic literature found that "high-skilled migrants boost innovation and productivity outcomes."[109] According to a 2013 survey of the existing economic literature, "much of the existing research points towards positive net contributions by immigrant entrepreneurs."[225] Areas where immigrant are more prevalent in the United States have substantially more innovation (as measured by patenting and citations).[226] Immigrants to the United States create businesses at higher rates than natives.[227] A 2010 study showed "that a 1 percentage point increase in immigrant college graduates' population share increases patents per capita by 9–18 percent."[228] Mass migration can also boost innovation and growth, as shown by the Jewish, Huguenot and Bohemian diasporas in Berlin and Prussia,[229][230][231] German Jewish Émigrés in the US,[232] the Mariel boatlift,[233] the exodus of Soviet Jews to Israel in the 1990s,[118] European migration to Argentina during the Age of Mass Migration (1850–1914),[234] west-east migration in the wake of German reunification,[235] German migration to Russian Empire,[236] and Polish immigration to Germany after joining the EU.[237] A 2018 study in the Economic Journal found that "a 10% increase in immigration from exporters of a given product is associated with a 2% increase in the likelihood that the host country starts exporting that good 'from scratch' in the next decade."[238]

Immigrants have been linked to greater invention and innovation.[239][240][241][242][243][244] According to one report, "immigrants have started more than half (44 of 87) of America's startup companies valued at $1 billion dollars or more and are key members of management or product development teams in over 70 percent (62 of 87) of these companies."[245] One analysis found that immigrant-owned firms had a higher innovation rate (on most measures of innovation) than firms owned by U.S.-born entrepreneurs.[246] Research also shows that labor migration increases human capital.[73][71][72][74][247] Foreign doctoral students are a major source of innovation in the American economy.[248] In the United States, immigrant workers hold a disproportionate share of jobs in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM): "In 2013, foreign-born workers accounted for 19.2 percent of STEM workers with a bachelor's degree, 40.7 percent of those with a master's degree, and more than half—54.5 percent—of those with a PhD"[249]

A number of countries across the globe offer Economic Citizenship Programs where in return for investing into the local economy, foreign investors are awarded citizenship. Such programs encourage innovation and entrepreneurship from foreign investors and high net worth individuals who as new citizens in the country can offer unique perspectives. St. Kitts and Nevis was the first country to offer economic citizenship back in 1984 creating a new market for citizenship and by the early 2000s other Caribbean countries joined them.[250]

Quality of institutions

A 2015 study finds "some evidence that larger immigrant population shares (or inflows) yield positive impacts on institutional quality. At a minimum, our results indicate that no negative impact on economic freedom is associated with more immigration."[251] Another study, looking at the increase in Israel's population in the 1990s due to the unrestricted immigration of Jews from the Soviet Union, finds that the mass immigration did not undermine political institutions, and substantially increased the quality of economic institutions.[252] A 2017 study in the British Journal of Political Science argued that the British American colonies without slavery adopted better democratic institutions in order to attract migrant workers to their colonies.[253][254] A 2018 study fails to find evidence that immigration to the United States weakens economic freedom.[255] A 2019 study of Jordan found that the massive influx of refugees into Jordan during the Gulf War had long-lasting positive effects on Jordanian economic institutions.[256]

Welfare

Some research has found that as immigration and ethnic heterogeneity increase, government funding of welfare and public support for welfare decrease.[257][258][259][260][261][262] Ethnic nepotism may be an explanation for this phenomenon. Other possible explanations include theories regarding in-group and out-group effects and reciprocal altruism.[263]

Research however also challenges the notion that ethnic heterogeneity reduces public goods provision.[264][265][266][267] Studies that find a negative relationship between ethnic diversity and public goods provision often fail to take into account that strong states were better at assimilating minorities, thus decreasing diversity in the long run.[264][265] Ethnically diverse states today consequently tend to be weaker states.[264] Because most of the evidence on fractionalization comes from sub-Saharan Africa and the United States, the generalizability of the findings is questionable.[266] A 2018 study in the American Political Science Review cast doubts on findings that ethnoracial homogeneity led to greater public goods provision.[268]

Research finds that Americans' attitudes towards immigration influence their attitudes towards welfare spending.[269]

Education

A 2016 study found that immigration in the period 1940–2010 in the United States increased the high school completion of natives: "An increase of one percentage point in the share of immigrants in the population aged 11–64 increases the probability that natives aged 11–17 eventually complete 12 years of schooling by 0.3 percentage point."[270] A 2019 NBER paper found little evidence that exposure to foreign-born students had an impact on US-born students.[271]

Studies have found that non-native speakers of English in the UK have no causal impact on the performance of other pupils,[272] immigrant children have no significant impact on the test scores of Dutch children,[273] no effect on grade repetition among native students exposed to migrant students in Austrian schools,[274] that the presence of Latin American children in schools had no significant negative effects on peers, but that students with limited English skills had slight negative effects on peers,[275] and that the influx of Haitians to Florida public schools after the 2010 Haiti earthquake had no effects on the educational outcomes of incumbent students.[276]

A 2018 study found that the "presence of immigrant students who have been in the country for some time is found to have no effect on natives. However, a small negative effect of recent immigrants on natives' language scores is reported."[277] Another 2018 study found that the presence of immigrant students to Italy was associated with "small negative average effects on maths test scores that are larger for low ability native students, strongly non-linear and only observable in classes with a high (top 20%) immigrant concentration. These outcomes are driven by classes with a high average linguistic distance between immigrants and natives, with no apparent additional role played by ethnic diversity."[278]

Social capital

There is some research that suggests that immigration adversely affects social capital.[279] One study, for instance, found that "larger increases in US states' Mexican population shares correspond to larger decreases in social capital over the period" 1986–2004.[280] A 2017 study in the Journal of Comparative Economics found that "individuals whose ancestors migrated from countries with higher autocracy levels are less likely to trust others and to vote in presidential elections in the U.S. The impact of autocratic culture on trust can last for at least three generations while the impact on voting disappears after one generation. These impacts on trust and voting are also significant across Europe."[281] A 2019 study found that "humans are inclined to react negatively to threats to homogeneity... in the short term. However, these negative outcomes are compensated in the long term by the beneficial influence of intergroup contact, which alleviates initial negative influences."[282]

Health

Research suggests that immigration has positive effects on native workers' health.[283][284] As immigration rises, native workers are pushed into less demanding jobs, which improves native workers' health outcomes.[283][284]

A 2018 study found that immigration to the United Kingdom "reduced waiting times for outpatient referrals and did not have significant effects on waiting times in accident and emergency departments (A&E) and elective care."[285] The study also found "evidence that immigration increased waiting times for outpatient referrals in more deprived areas outside of London" but that this increase disappears after 3 to 4 years.[285]

A 2018 systemic review and meta-analysis in The Lancet found that migrants generally have better health than the general population.[286]

In the EU, the use of personal health records for migrants is being tested in the new REHEALTH 2 project.[287]

Housing

A 2014 study of the United Kingdom found that immigration generally reduced local house prices in the areas they moved to, because natives at the top of the wage distribution respond to immigration by moving to other areas, reducing demand for housing.[288] At the national level, an increase in the number of immigrants increases house prices.[288]

Crime

Immigration and crime refers to the relationship between criminal activity and immigrant communities. Research suggests that people tend to overestimate the relationship between immigration and criminality,[289][290][291] and that the media tends to erroneously depict immigrants as particularly crime-prone.[292] The academic literature provides mixed findings for the relationship between immigration and crime worldwide, but finds for the United States that immigration either has no impact on the crime rate or that it reduces the crime rate.[290][293][294][295][296][297][298][299][300] A meta-analysis of 51 studies from 1994–2014 on the relationship between immigration and crime in the United States found that overall immigration reduces crime, but the relationship is very weak.[301]

The over-representation of immigrants in the criminal justice systems of several countries may be due to socioeconomic factors, imprisonment for migration offenses, and racial and ethnic discrimination by police and the judicial system.[302][303][304][305][306][307] The relationship between immigration and terrorism is understudied, but existing research suggests that the relationship is weak and that repression of the immigrants increases the terror risk.[308][309][310] Research on the relationship between refugee migration and crime is scarce, but existing empirical evidence fails to substantiate a relationship between refugee migration and crime.[311][312]

Bogus recruitment agencies and rogue recruitment agencies make fake promises of better opportunities, education, income, some of the abuses and crimes experienced by immigrants are the followed:

In many countries there is a lack of prosecution of this crimes, since these countries obtain benefits and taxes paid by these companies that benefit the economies and also because of the current shortage of workers.[313][314][315][316]

Impact on demographic tension

Assimilation

A 2019 review of existing research in the Annual Review of Sociology on immigrant assimilation in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Belgium, the Netherlands and Spain concluded "we find an overall pattern of intergenerational assimilation in terms of socioeconomic attainment, social relations, and cultural beliefs."[317]

Country of origin

Return migration from countries with liberal gender norms has been associated with the transfer of liberal gender norms to the home country.[318]

United States

A 2018 study in the American Sociological Review found that within racial groups, most immigrants to the United States had fully assimilated within a span of 20 years.[24] Immigrants arriving in the United States after 1994 assimilate more rapidly than immigrants who arrived in previous periods.[24] Measuring assimilation can be difficult due to "ethnic attrition", which refers to when descendants of migrants cease to self-identify with the nationality or ethnicity of their ancestors. This means that successful cases of assimilation will be underestimated. Research shows that ethnic attrition is sizable in Hispanic and Asian immigrant groups in the United States.[319][320] By taking account of ethnic attrition, the assimilation rate of Hispanics in the United States improves significantly.[319][321] A 2016 paper challenges the view that cultural differences are necessarily an obstacle to long-run economic performance of migrants. It finds that "first generation migrants seem to be less likely to success the more culturally distant they are, but this effect vanishes as time spent in the US increases."[322]

A 2018 study found that Chinese nationals in the United States who received permanent residency permits from the US government amid the Tiananmen Square protests (and subsequent Chinese government clampdown) experienced significant employment and earnings gains relative to similar immigrant groups who did not have the same residency rights.[323]

During the Age of Mass Migration, infant arrivals to the United States had greater economic success over their lifetime than teenage arrivals.[324]

Europe

A 2015 report by the National Institute of Demographic Studies finds that an overwhelming majority of second-generation immigrants of all origins in France feel French, despite the persistent discrimination in education, housing and employment that many of the minorities face.[325]

Research shows that country of origin matters for speed and depth of immigrant assimilation but that there is considerable assimilation overall.[25] Research finds that first generation immigrants from countries with less egalitarian gender cultures adopt gender values more similar to natives over time.[326][327] According to one study, "this acculturation process is almost completed within one generational succession: The gender attitudes of second generation immigrants are difficult to distinguish from the attitudes of members of mainstream society. This holds also for children born to immigrants from very gender traditional cultures and for children born to less well integrated immigrant families."[326] Similar results are found on a study of Turkish migrants to Western Europe.[327] The assimilation on gender attitudes has been observed in education, as one study finds "that the female advantage in education observed among the majority population is usually present among second-generation immigrants."[328]

 
Share of migrants in all countries. Data from 2015.

A 2017 study of Switzerland found that naturalization strongly improves long-term social integration of immigrants: "The integration returns to naturalization are larger for more marginalized immigrant groups and when naturalization occurs earlier, rather than later in the residency period."[329] A separate study of Switzerland found that naturalization improved the economic integration of immigrants: "winning Swiss citizenship in the referendum increased annual earnings by an average of approximately 5,000 U.S. dollars over the subsequent 15 years. This effect is concentrated among more marginalized immigrants."[330]

First-generation immigrants tend to hold less accepting views of homosexuality but opposition weakens with longer stays.[331] Second-generation immigrants are overall more accepting of homosexuality, but the acculturation effect is weaker for Muslims and to some extent, Eastern Orthodox migrants.[331]

A study of Bangladeshi migrants in East London found they shifted towards the thinking styles of the wider non-migrant population in just a single generation.[332]

A study on Germany found that foreign-born parents are more likely to integrate if their children are entitled to German citizenship at birth.[333] A 2017 study found that "faster access to citizenship improves the economic situation of immigrant women, especially their labour market attachment with higher employment rates, longer working hours and more stable jobs. Immigrants also invest more in host country-specific skills like language and vocational training. Faster access to citizenship seems a powerful policy instrument to boost economic integration in countries with traditionally restrictive citizenship policies."[334] Naturalization is associated with large and persistent wage gains for the naturalized citizens in most countries.[335] One study of Denmark found that providing immigrants with voting rights reduced their crime rate.[336]

Studies on programs that randomly allocate refugee immigrants across municipalities find that the assignment of neighborhood impacts immigrant crime propensity, education and earnings.[337][338][339][340][341][342] A 2019 study found that refugees who resettled in areas with many conationals were more likely to be economically integrated.[343]

Research suggests that bilingual schooling reduces barriers between speakers from two different communities.[344]

Research suggests that a vicious cycle of bigotry and isolation could reduce assimilation and increase bigotry towards immigrants in the long-term. For instance, University of California, San Diego political scientist Claire Adida, Stanford University political scientist David Laitin and Sorbonne University economist Marie-Anne Valfort argue "fear-based policies that target groups of people according to their religion or region of origin are counter-productive. Our own research, which explains the failed integration of Muslim immigrants in France, suggests that such policies can feed into a vicious cycle that damages national security. French Islamophobia—a response to cultural difference—has encouraged Muslim immigrants to withdraw from French society, which then feeds back into French Islamophobia, thus further exacerbating Muslims' alienation, and so on. Indeed, the failure of French security in 2015 was likely due to police tactics that intimidated rather than welcomed the children of immigrants—an approach that makes it hard to obtain crucial information from community members about potential threats."[345][346]

A study which examined Catalan nationalism examined the Catalan Government's policy towards the integration of immigrants during the start of the 1990s. At this time the Spanish region of Catalonia was experiencing a large influx in the number of immigrants from Northern Africa, Latin America and Asia. The Spanish government paid little attention to this influx of immigrants. However, Catalan politicians began discussing how the increase in immigrants would effect Catalan identity. Members of the Catalan parliament petitioned for a plan to integrate these immigrants into Catalan society. Crucially, the plan did not include policies regarding naturalisation, which were key immigration policies of the Spanish government. The plan of the Catalan parliament aimed to create a shared Catalan identity which included both the native Catalan population and immigrant communities. This meant that immigrants were encouraged to relate as part of the Catalan community but also encouraged to retain their own culture and traditions. In this way assimilation of immigrant cultures in Catalonia was avoided.[347]

A 2018 study in the British Journal of Political Science found that immigrants in Norway became more politically engaged the earlier that they were given voting rights.[348]

A 2019 study in the European Economic Review found that language training improved the economic assimilation of immigrants in France.[349]

A 2020 paper on reforms of refugee policy in Denmark found that language training boosted the economic and social integration of refugees, whereas cuts to refugees' welfare benefits had no impact, except to temporarily increase property crimes.[350]

Discrimination

Europe

Research suggests that police practices, such as racial profiling, over-policing in areas populated by minorities and in-group bias may result in disproportionately high numbers of racial minorities among crime suspects in Sweden, Italy, and England and Wales.[351][352][353][354][355] Research also suggests that there may be possible discrimination by the judicial system, which contributes to a higher number of convictions for racial minorities in Sweden, the Netherlands, Italy, Germany, Denmark and France.[351][353][354][356][357][358][359] A 2018 study found that the Dutch are less likely to reciprocate in games played with immigrants than the native Dutch.[360]

Several meta-analyses find extensive evidence of ethnic and racial discrimination in hiring in the North-American and European labor markets.[27][26][361] A 2016 meta-analysis of 738 correspondence tests in 43 separate studies conducted in OECD countries between 1990 and 2015 finds that there is extensive racial discrimination in hiring decisions in Europe and North-America.[26] Equivalent minority candidates need to send around 50% more applications to be invited for an interview than majority candidates.[26]

A 2014 meta-analysis found extensive evidence of racial and ethnic discrimination in the housing market of several European countries.[27]

United Kingdom

Since 2010, the United Kingdom’s policies surrounding immigrant detention have come under fire for insufficiently protecting vulnerable groups. In the early 2000s, the United Kingdom adopted the Detention Duty Advice (DDA) scheme in order to provide free, government-funded, legal aid to immigrants. The DDA scheme at face value granted liberty on administrative grounds by considering immigrant merits, nature of their work, their financial means, and other factors that would then determine how much free legal aid detainees were granted. Recent research by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), demonstrates that marginalized groups have been barred from legal assistance in detention centers. The barriers immigrants face in order to access justice through the DDA disproportionately impacted underrepresented groups of immigrants, and the language barrier and lack of interpreters led to further hurdles that detainees were unable to jump through.[59]

Canada

In Canada immigrant detainees face barriers to justice due to a lack of international enforcement. Canada’s immigration detention system has significant legal and normative problems, and the rubric of ‘access to justice’ that is presented by international law fails to identify these faults. There is a lack of access to legal aid for immigrants in detention, as well as inhumane treatment in detention centers. Research has demonstrated irreparable psychological, physical, and social damage to immigrants, and the international community ignores these injustices.[362]

United States

Business

A 2014 meta-analysis of racial discrimination in product markets found extensive evidence of minority applicants being quoted higher prices for products.[27] A 1995 study found that car dealers "quoted significantly lower prices to white males than to black or female test buyers using identical, scripted bargaining strategies."[363] A 2013 study found that eBay sellers of iPods received 21 percent more offers if a white hand held the iPod in the photo than a black hand.[364]

Criminal justice system

Research suggests that police practices, such as racial profiling, over-policing in areas populated by minorities and in-group bias may result in disproportionately high numbers of racial minorities among crime suspects.[365][366][367][368] Research also suggests that there may be possible discrimination by the judicial system, which contributes to a higher number of convictions for racial minorities.[369][370][371][372][373] A 2012 study found that "(i) juries formed from all-white jury pools convict black defendants significantly (16 percentage points) more often than white defendants, and (ii) this gap in conviction rates is entirely eliminated when the jury pool includes at least one black member."[371] Research has found evidence of in-group bias, where "black (white) juveniles who are randomly assigned to black (white) judges are more likely to get incarcerated (as opposed to being placed on probation), and they receive longer sentences."[373] In-group bias has also been observed when it comes to traffic citations, as black and white cops are more likely to cite out-groups.[367]

Education

A 2015 study using correspondence tests "found that when considering requests from prospective students seeking mentoring in the future, faculty were significantly more responsive to White males than to all other categories of students, collectively, particularly in higher-paying disciplines and private institutions."[374]

According to an analysis of the National Study of College Experience, elite colleges may favor minority applicants due to affirmative action policies.[375]

A 2018 National Bureau of Economic Research paper found that math teachers discriminate against the children of immigrants. When the teachers were informed about negative stereotypes towards the children of immigrants, they gave higher grades to the children of immigrants.[376]

As of 2020, 2 percent of all students enrolled in U.S. higher education. That comes out to about 454,000 students. Fewer than half of the undocumented are eligible for the DACA program. DACA is formally known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.[377]

Housing

A 2014 meta-analysis found extensive evidence of racial discrimination in the American housing market.[27] Minority applicants for housing needed to make many more enquiries to view properties.[27] Geographical steering of African-Americans in US housing remained significant.[27] A 2003 study finds "evidence that agents interpret an initial housing request as an indication of a customer's preferences, but also are more likely to withhold a house from all customers when it is in an integrated suburban neighborhood (redlining). Moreover, agents' marketing efforts increase with asking price for white, but not for black, customers; blacks are more likely than whites to see houses in suburban, integrated areas (steering); and the houses agents show are more likely to deviate from the initial request when the customer is black than when the customer is white. These three findings are consistent with the possibility that agents act upon the belief that some types of transactions are relatively unlikely for black customers (statistical discrimination)."[378]

A report by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development where the department sent African-Americans and whites to look at apartments found that African-Americans were shown fewer apartments to rent and houses for sale.[379]

Labor market

Several meta-analyses find extensive evidence of ethnic and racial discrimination in hiring in the American labor market.[27][361][26] A 2016 meta-analysis of 738 correspondence tests—tests where identical CVs for stereotypically black and white names were sent to employers—in 43 separate studies conducted in OECD countries between 1990 and 2015 finds that there is extensive racial discrimination in hiring decisions in Europe and North-America.[26] These correspondence tests showed that equivalent minority candidates need to send around 50% more applications to be invited for an interview than majority candidates.[26][380] A study that examine the job applications of actual people provided with identical résumés and similar interview training showed that African-American applicants with no criminal record were offered jobs at a rate as low as white applicants who had criminal records.[381]

See also

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immigration, practice, checking, travellers, documents, when, entering, country, border, control, album, show, album, confused, with, emigration, migration, immigrant, redirects, here, other, uses, immigrant, disambiguation, international, movement, people, de. For the practice of checking travellers documents when entering a country see border control For the album by Show Ya see Immigration album Not to be confused with emigration or migration Immigrant redirects here For other uses see Immigrant disambiguation Immigration is the international movement of people to a destination country of which they are not natives or where they do not possess citizenship in order to settle as permanent residents or naturalized citizens 1 2 3 Commuters tourists and other short term stays in a destination country do not fall under the definition of immigration or migration seasonal labour immigration is sometimes included however Net migration rates for 2016 net immigration blue net emigration orange stable green and no data gray As for economic effects research suggests that migration is beneficial both to the receiving and sending countries 4 5 6 Research with few exceptions finds that immigration on average has positive economic effects on the native population but is mixed as to whether low skilled immigration adversely affects low skilled natives 7 8 9 10 11 Studies show that the elimination of barriers to migration would have profound effects on world GDP with estimates of gains ranging between 67 and 147 percent for the scenarios in which 37 to 53 percent of the developing countries workers migrate to the developed countries 12 13 14 15 Development economists argue that reducing barriers to labor mobility between developing countries and developed countries would be one of the most efficient tools of poverty reduction 16 17 18 19 Positive net immigration can soften the demographic dilemma in the aging global North 20 21 The academic literature provides mixed findings for the relationship between immigration and crime worldwide but finds for the United States that immigration either has no impact on the crime rate or that it reduces the crime rate 22 23 Research shows that country of origin matters for speed and depth of immigrant assimilation but that there is considerable assimilation overall for both first and second generation immigrants 24 25 Research has found extensive evidence of discrimination against foreign born and minority populations in criminal justice business the economy housing health care media and politics in the United States and Europe 26 27 28 29 Contents 1 History 2 Statistics 2 1 2012 survey 3 Push and pull factors of immigration 4 Economic migrant 5 Laws and ethics 6 Economic effects 6 1 Overall economic prosperity 6 2 Inequality 6 3 Fiscal effects 6 4 Impact of refugees 6 5 Impact of undocumented immigrants 6 6 Impact on the sending countries 6 7 Impact on global poverty 6 8 Innovation and entrepreneurship 7 Quality of institutions 8 Welfare 9 Education 10 Social capital 11 Health 12 Housing 13 Crime 14 Impact on demographic tension 14 1 Assimilation 14 1 1 Country of origin 14 1 2 United States 14 1 3 Europe 14 2 Discrimination 14 2 1 Europe 14 2 1 1 United Kingdom 14 2 2 Canada 14 2 3 United States 14 2 3 1 Business 14 2 3 2 Criminal justice system 14 2 3 3 Education 14 2 3 4 Housing 14 2 3 5 Labor market 15 See also 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistoryFurther information History of human migration This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2015 The term immigration was coined in the 17th century referring to non warlike population movements between the emerging nation states When people cross national borders during their migration they are called migrants or immigrants from Latin migrare wanderer from the perspective of the destination country In contrast from the perspective of the country from which they leave they are called emigrants or outmigrants 30 Statistics The global population of immigrants has grown since 1990 but has remained constant at around 3 of the world s population 31 As of 2015 update the number of international migrants has reached 244 million worldwide which reflects a 41 increase since 2000 One third of the world s international migrants are living in just 20 countries The largest number of international migrants live in the United States with 19 of the world s total Germany and Russia host 12 million migrants each taking the second and third place in countries with the most migrants worldwide Saudi Arabia hosts 10 million migrants followed by the United Kingdom 9 million and the United Arab Emirates 8 million 32 In most parts of the world migration occurs between countries that are located within the same major area Between 2000 and 2015 Asia added more international migrants than any other major area in the world gaining 26 million Europe added the second largest with about 20 million 32 In 2015 the number of international migrants below the age of 20 reached 37 million while 177 million are between the ages of 20 and 64 International migrants living in Africa were the youngest with a median age of 29 followed by Asia 35 years and Latin America Caribbean 36 years while migrants were older in Northern America 42 years Europe 43 years and Oceania 44 years 32 The number of migrants and migrant workers per country in 2015 Nearly half 43 of all international migrants originate in Asia and Europe was the birthplace of the second largest number of migrants 25 followed by Latin America 15 India has the largest diaspora in the world 16 million people followed by Mexico 12 million and Russia 11 million 32 2012 survey A 2012 survey by Gallup found that given the opportunity 640 million adults would migrate to another country with 23 of these would be immigrant choosing the United States as their desired future residence while 7 of respondents representing 45 million people would choose the United Kingdom Canada France Saudi Arabia Australia Germany Spain Italy and the United Arab Emirates made up the rest of the top ten desired destination countries 33 Push and pull factors of immigration The largest Vietnamese market in Prague also known as Little Hanoi In 2009 there were about 70 000 Vietnamese in the Czech Republic 34 London has become multiethnic as a result of immigration 35 In London in 2008 Black British and British Asian children outnumbered white British children by about 3 to 2 in government run schools 36 One theory of immigration distinguishes between push and pull factors referring to the economic political and social influences by which people migrate from or to specific countries 37 Immigrants are motivated to leave their former countries of citizenship or habitual residence for a variety of reasons including a lack of local access to resources a desire for economic prosperity to find or engage in paid work to better their standard of living family reunification retirement climate or environmentally induced migration exile escape from prejudice conflict or natural disaster or simply the wish to change one s quality of life Commuters tourists and other short term stays in a destination country do not fall under the definition of immigration or migration seasonal labour immigration is sometimes included however Push factors or determinant factors refer primarily to the motive for leaving one s country of origin either voluntarily or involuntarily whereas pull factors or attraction factors refer to one s motivations behind or the encouragement towards immigrating to a particular country In the case of economic migration usually labor migration differentials in wage rates are common If the value of wages in the new country surpasses the value of wages in one s native country he or she may choose to migrate as long as the costs are not too high Particularly in the 19th century economic expansion of the US increased immigrant flow and nearly 15 of the population was foreign born 38 thus making up a significant amount of the labor force As transportation technology improved travel time and costs decreased dramatically between the 18th and early 20th century Travel across the Atlantic used to take up to 5 weeks in the 18th century but around the time of the 20th century it took a mere 8 days 39 When the opportunity cost is lower the immigration rates tend to be higher 39 Escape from poverty personal or for relatives staying behind is a traditional push factor and the availability of jobs is the related pull factor Natural disasters can amplify poverty driven migration flows Research shows that for middle income countries higher temperatures increase emigration rates to urban areas and to other countries For low income countries higher temperatures reduce emigration 40 Emigration and immigration are sometimes mandatory in a contract of employment religious missionaries and employees of transnational corporations international non governmental organizations and the diplomatic service expect by definition to work overseas They are often referred to as expatriates and their conditions of employment are typically equal to or better than those applying in the host country for similar work citation needed Non economic push factors include persecution religious and otherwise frequent abuse bullying oppression ethnic cleansing genocide risks to civilians during war and social marginalization 41 Political motives traditionally motivate refugee flows for instance people may emigrate in order to escape a dictatorship 42 Some migration is for personal reasons based on a relationship e g to be with family or a partner such as in family reunification or transnational marriage especially in the instance of a gender imbalance Recent research has found gender age and cross cultural differences in the ownership of the idea to immigrate 43 In a few cases an individual may wish to immigrate to a new country in a form of transferred patriotism Evasion of criminal justice e g avoiding arrest is a personal motivation This type of emigration and immigration is not normally legal if a crime is internationally recognized although criminals may disguise their identities or find other loopholes to evade detection For example there have been reports of war criminals disguising themselves as victims of war or conflict and then pursuing asylum in a different country 44 45 46 Barriers to immigration come not only in legal form or political form natural and social barriers to immigration can also be very powerful Immigrants when leaving their country also leave everything familiar their family friends support network and culture They also need to liquidate their assets and they incur the expense of moving When they arrive in a new country this is often with many uncertainties including finding work 47 where to live new laws new cultural norms language or accent issues possible racism and other exclusionary behavior towards them and their family 48 49 50 The Iron Curtain in Europe was designed as a means of preventing emigration It is one of the ironies of post war European history that once the freedom to travel for Europeans living under communist regimes which had long been demanded by the West was finally granted in 1989 90 travel was very soon afterwards made much more difficult by the West itself and new barriers were erected to replace the Iron Curtain Anita Bocker 51 The politics of immigration have become increasingly associated with other issues such as national security and terrorism especially in western Europe with the presence of Islam as a new major religion Those with security concerns cite the 2005 French riots and point to the Jyllands Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy as examples of the value conflicts arising from immigration of Muslims in Western Europe Because of all these associations immigration has become an emotional political issue in many European nations 52 53 Studies have suggested that some special interest groups lobby for less immigration for their own group and more immigration for other groups since they see effects of immigration such as increased labor competition as detrimental when affecting their own group but beneficial when impacting other groups A 2010 European study suggested that employers are more likely to be pro immigration than employees provided that immigrants are thought to compete with employees who are already in the country Or else when immigrants are thought to compete with employers rather than employees employers are more likely to be anti immigration than employees 54 A 2011 study examining the voting of US representatives on migration policy suggests that representatives from more skilled labor abundant districts are more likely to support an open immigration policy towards the unskilled whereas the opposite is true for representatives from more unskilled labor abundant districts 55 Another contributing factor may be lobbying by earlier immigrants The chairman for the US Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform which lobby for more permissive rules for immigrants as well as special arrangements just for Irish people has stated that the Irish Lobby will push for any special arrangement it can get as will every other ethnic group in the country 56 57 Economic migrantFurther information Economic migrant The Indo Bangladeshi barrier in 2007 India is building a separation barrier along the 4 000 kilometer border with Bangladesh to prevent illegal immigration The term economic migrant refers to someone who has travelled from one region to another region for the purposes of seeking employment and an improvement in quality of life and access to resources An economic migrant is distinct from someone who is a refugee fleeing persecution Many countries have immigration and visa restrictions that prohibit a person entering the country for the purposes of gaining work without a valid work visa As a violation of a State s immigration laws a person who is declared to be an economic migrant can be refused entry into a country The World Bank estimates that remittances totaled 420 billion in 2009 of which 317 billion went to developing countries 58 Laws and ethics UNHCR tents at a refugee camp following episodes of anti immigrant violence in South Africa 2008 Main article Immigration lawLegislation regarding the protection of rights of immigrants and equal access to justice differs per nation International law the product of the United Nations and other multinational organizations creates protocols governing immigrant rights International law and the European Convention of Human Rights state that immigrants can only be detained for legitimate aims of the state It also notes that vulnerable people should be protected from unreasonable punishment and lengthy detention International law outlines requirements for due process and suitable conditions However nations are sovereign and the protocols of international law cannot be enforced upon them Nations have the freedom to handle immigrants as they choose and to structure how any legal aid is distributed Human rights organizations strongly criticize individual nation states for the limitations of their immigration policies and practices 59 Entry top and Exit bottom passport stamps issued to a citizen of Germany by Indian immigration authorities at New Delhi airport Treatment of migrants in host countries both by governments employers and original population is a topic of continual debate and criticism and the violation of migrant human rights is an ongoing crisis 60 The United Nations Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families has been ratified by 48 states most of which are heavy exporters of cheap labor Major migrant receiving countries and regions including Western Europe North America Pacific Asia Australia and the Gulf States have not ratified the convention even though they are host to the majority of international migrant workers 61 62 Although freedom of movement is often recognized as a civil right in many documents such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948 and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966 the freedom only applies to movement within national borders and the ability to return to one s home state 63 64 Some proponents of immigration argue that the freedom of movement both within and between countries is a basic human right and that the restrictive immigration policies typical of nation states violate this human right of freedom of movement 65 Such arguments are common among ideologies like anarchism and libertarianism 66 67 As philosopher and open borders activist Jacob Appel has written Treating human beings differently simply because they were born on the opposite side of a national boundary is hard to justify under any mainstream philosophical religious or ethical theory citation needed Where immigration is permitted it is typically selective As of 2003 update family reunification accounted for approximately two thirds of legal immigration to the US every year 68 Ethnic selection such as the White Australia policy has generally disappeared but priority is usually given to the educated skilled and wealthy Less privileged individuals including the mass of poor people in low income countries cannot avail themselves of the legal and protected immigration opportunities offered by wealthy states This inequality has also been criticized as conflicting with the principle of equal opportunities The fact that the door is closed for the unskilled while at the same time many developed countries have a huge demand for unskilled labor is a major factor in illegal immigration The contradictory nature of this policy which specifically disadvantages the unskilled immigrants while exploiting their labor has also been criticized on ethical grounds citation needed Immigration policies which selectively grant freedom of movement to targeted individuals are intended to produce a net economic gain for the host country They can also mean net loss for a poor donor country through the loss of the educated minority a brain drain This can exacerbate the global inequality in standards of living that provided the motivation for the individual to migrate in the first place One example of competition for skilled labour is active recruitment of health workers from developing countries by developed countries 69 70 There may however also be a brain gain to emigration as migration opportunities lead to greater investments in education in developing countries 71 72 73 74 Overall research suggests that migration is beneficial both to the receiving and sending countries 5 Economic effectsA survey of leading economists shows a consensus behind the view that high skilled immigration makes the average American better off 75 A survey of the same economists also shows support behind the notion that low skilled immigration makes the average American better off and makes many low skilled American workers substantially worse off unless they are compensated by others 76 A survey of European economists shows a consensus that freer movement of people to live and work across borders within Europe makes the average European better off and strong support behind the notion that it has not made low skilled Europeans worse off 9 According to David Card Christian Dustmann and Ian Preston most existing studies of the economic impacts of immigration suggest these impacts are small and on average benefit the native population 7 In a survey of the existing literature Orn B Bodvarsson and Hendrik Van den Berg write a comparison of the evidence from all the studies makes it clear that with very few exceptions there is no strong statistical support for the view held by many members of the public mainly that immigration has an adverse effect on native born workers in the destination country 77 Overall economic prosperity Whereas the impact on the average native tends to be small and positive studies show more mixed results for low skilled natives but whether the effects are positive or negative they tend to be small either way 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 excessive citations Research indicates that immigrants are more likely to work in risky jobs than U S born workers partly due to differences in average characteristics such as immigrants lower English language ability and educational attainment 108 According to a 2017 survey of the existing economic literature studies on high skilled migrants rarely find adverse wage and employment consequences and longer time horizons tend to show greater gains 109 Competition from immigrants in a particular profession may aggravate underemployment in that profession 110 but increase wages for other natives 109 for instance a 2017 study in Science found that the influx of foreign born computer scientists since the early 1990s increased the size of the US IT sector benefited consumers via lower prices and more efficient products raised overall worker incomes by 0 2 to 0 3 but decreased wages of U S computer scientists by 2 6 to 5 1 111 A 2019 study found that foreign college workers in STEM occupations did not displace native college workers in STEM occupations but instead had a positive impact on the latter group s wages 112 A 2021 study similarly found that highly educated immigrants to Switzerland caused wages to increase for highly educated Swiss natives 113 A 2019 study found that greater immigration led to less off shoring by firms 114 Research also suggests that diversity and immigration have a net positive effect on productivity 115 116 117 94 118 119 and economic prosperity 120 121 122 123 124 Immigration has also been associated with reductions in offshoring 119 A study found that the Age of Mass Migration 1850 1920 contributed to higher incomes higher productivity more innovation and more industrialization in the short run and higher incomes less poverty less unemployment higher rates of urbanization and greater educational attainment in the long run for the United States 125 Research also shows that migration to Latin America during the Age of Mass Migration had a positive impact on long run economic development 126 Studies show that the elimination of barriers to migration would have profound effects on world GDP with estimates of gains ranging between 67 and 147 3 12 13 14 127 128 129 Research also finds that migration leads to greater trade in goods and services 130 131 132 133 134 and increases in financial flows between the sending and receiving countries 135 136 Using 130 years of data on historical migrations to the United States one study finds that a doubling of the number of residents with ancestry from a given foreign country relative to the mean increases by 4 2 percentage points the probability that at least one local firm invests in that country and increases by 31 the number of employees at domestic recipients of FDI from that country The size of these effects increases with the ethnic diversity of the local population the geographic distance to the origin country and the ethno linguistic fractionalization of the origin country 137 A 2017 study found that immigrants genetic diversity is significantly positively correlated with measures of U S counties economic development during the Age of Mass Migration There exists also a significant positive relationship between immigrants genetic diversity in 1870 and contemporaneous measures of U S counties average income 138 Some research suggests that immigration can offset some of the adverse effects of automation on native labor outcomes 139 140 By increasing overall demand immigrants could push natives out of low skilled manual labor into better paying occupations 139 140 A 2018 study in the American Economic Review found that the Bracero program which allowed almost half a million Mexican workers to do seasonal farm labor in the United States did not have any adverse impact on the labor market outcomes of American born farm workers 141 A 2019 study by economic historians found that immigration restrictions implemented in the 1920s had an adverse impact on US born workers earnings 142 A 2016 paper by University of Southern Denmark and University of Copenhagen economists found that the 1924 immigration restrictions enacted in the United States impaired the economy 143 144 Inequality Overall immigration was found to account for a relatively small share of the rise of native wage inequality 145 146 but low skill immigration has been linked to greater income inequality in the native population 147 148 Greater openness to low skilled immigration in wealthy countries would drastically reduce global income inequality 148 149 Fiscal effects A 2011 literature review of the economic impacts of immigration found that the net fiscal impact of migrants varies across studies but that the most credible analyses typically find small and positive fiscal effects on average 82 According to the authors the net social impact of an immigrant over his or her lifetime depends substantially and in predictable ways on the immigrant s age at arrival education reason for migration and similar 82 According to a 2007 literature review by the Congressional Budget Office Over the past two decades most efforts to estimate the fiscal impact of immigration in the United States have concluded that in aggregate and over the long term tax revenues of all types generated by immigrants both legal and unauthorized exceed the cost of the services they use 150 A 2022 study found that the sharp reduction in refugee admissions adversely affected public coffers at all levels of government in the United States 151 A 2018 study found that inflows of asylum seekers into Western Europe from 1985 to 2015 had a net positive fiscal impact 152 153 Research has shown that EU immigrants made a net positive fiscal contribution to Denmark 154 and the United Kingdom 155 100 A 2017 study found that when Romanian and Bulgarian immigrants to the United Kingdom gained permission to acquire welfare benefits in 2014 that it had no discernible impact on the immigrants use of welfare benefits 156 A paper by a group of French economists found that over the period 1980 2015 international migration had a positive impact on the economic and fiscal performance of OECD countries 157 Impact of refugees A 2017 survey of leading economists found that 34 of economists agreed with the statement The influx of refugees into Germany beginning in the summer of 2015 will generate net economic benefits for German citizens over the succeeding decade whereas 38 were uncertain and 6 disagreed 158 Studies of refugees impact on native welfare are scant but the existing literature shows mixed results negative positive and no significant effects on native welfare 79 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 95 78 173 174 excessive citations According to economist Michael Clemens when economists have studied past influxes of refugees and migrants they have found the labor market effects while varied are very limited and can in fact be positive 175 A 2018 study in the Economic Journal found that Vietnamese refugees to the United States had a positive impact on American exports as exports to Vietnam grew most in US states with larger Vietnamese populations 134 A 2018 study in the journal Science Advances found that asylum seekers entering Western Europe in the period 1985 2015 had a positive macroeconomic and fiscal impact 152 153 A 2019 study found that the mass influx of 1 3 million Syrian refugees to Jordan total population 6 6 million did not have harm the labor market outcomes of native Jordanians 167 A 2020 study found that Syrian refugees to Turkey improved the productivity of Turkish firms 176 A 2017 paper by Evans and Fitzgerald found that refugees to the United States pay 21 000 more in taxes than they receive in benefits over their first 20 years in the U S 173 An internal study by the Department of Health and Human Services under the Trump administration which was suppressed and not shown to the public found that refugees to the United States brought in 63 billion more in government revenues than they cost the government 177 According to University of California Davis labor economist Giovanni Peri the existing literature suggests that there are no economic reasons why the American labor market could not easily absorb 100 000 Syrian refugees in a year citation needed A 2017 paper looking at the long term impact of refugees on the American labor market over the period 1980 2010 found that there is no adverse long run impact of refugees on the U S labor market 178 A 2022 study by economist Michael Clemens found that the sharp reduction in refugee admissions in the United States since 2017 had cost the U S economy over 9 1 billion per year and cost public coffers over 2 billion per year 151 Refugees integrate more slowly into host countries labor markets than labor migrants in part due to the loss and depreciation of human capital and credentials during the asylum procedure 179 Refugees tend to do worse in economic terms than natives even when they have the same skills and language proficiencies of natives For instance a 2013 study of Germans in West Germany who had been displaced from Eastern Europe during and after World War II showed that the forced German migrants did far worse economically than their native West German counterparts decades later 180 Second generation forced German migrants also did worse in economic terms than their native counterparts 180 A study of refugees to the United States found that refugees that enter the U S before age 14 graduate high school and enter college at the same rate as natives Refugees that enter as older teenagers have lower attainment with much of the difference attributable to language barriers and because many in this group are not accompanied by a parent to the U S 173 Refugees that entered the U S at ages 18 45 have much lower levels of education and poorer language skills than natives and outcomes are initially poor with low employment high welfare use and low earnings 173 But the authors of the study find that outcomes improve considerably as refugees age 173 A 2017 study found that the 0 5 million Portuguese who returned to Portugal from Mozambique and Angola in the mid 1970s lowered labor productivity and wages 181 A 2018 paper found that the areas in Greece that took on a larger share of Greek Orthodox refugees from the Greco Turkish War of 1919 1922 have today higher earnings higher levels of household wealth greater educational attainment as well as larger financial and manufacturing sectors 182 Impact of undocumented immigrants Research on the economic effects of undocumented immigrants is scant but existing studies suggests that the effects are positive for the native population 183 184 and public coffers 150 185 A 2015 study shows that increasing deportation rates and tightening border control weakens low skilled labor markets increasing unemployment of native low skilled workers Legalization instead decreases the unemployment rate of low skilled natives and increases income per native 81 Studies show that legalization of undocumented immigrants would boost the U S economy a 2013 study found that granting legal status to undocumented immigrants would raise their incomes by a quarter increasing U S GDP by approximately 1 4 trillion over a ten year period 186 and a 2016 study found that legalization would increase the economic contribution of the unauthorized population by about 20 to 3 6 of private sector GDP 187 A 2018 National Bureau of Economic Research paper found that undocumented immigrants to the United States generate higher surplus for US firms relative to natives hence restricting their entry has a depressing effect on job creation and in turn on native labor markets 188 In the US the Immigration Reform and Control Act was passed to help remove the illegal aliens They were trying to do this by granting legal status or by imposing penalties against the employers who would knowingly work illegal immigrants However IRCA did not address the reality or price which caused an issue in the accomplishing of the objectives 189 A 2017 study in the Journal of Public Economics found that more intense immigration enforcement increased the likelihood that US born children with undocumented immigrant parents would live in poverty 190 A paper by Spanish economists found that upon legalizing the undocumented immigrant population in Spain the fiscal revenues increased by around 4 189 per newly legalized immigrant 185 The paper found that the wages of the newly legalized immigrants increased after legalization some low skilled natives had worse labor market outcomes and high skilled natives had improved labor market outcomes 185 A 2018 study found no evidence that apprehensions of undocumented immigrants in districts in the United States improved the labor market outcomes for American natives 191 A 2020 study found that immigration enforcement in the US leads to declining production in the US dairy industry and that dairy operators respond to immigration enforcement by automating their operations rather than hire new labor 192 A 2021 study in the American Economic Journal found that undocumented immigrants had beneficial effects on the employment and wages of American natives Stricter immigration enforcement adversely affected employment and wages of American natives 193 Impact on the sending countries Research suggests that migration is beneficial both to the receiving and sending countries 5 6 According to one study welfare increases in both types of countries welfare impact of observed levels of migration is substantial at about 5 to 10 for the main receiving countries and about 10 in countries with large incoming remittances 5 According to Branko Milanovic country of residency is by far the most important determinant of global income inequality which suggests that the reduction in labor barriers would significantly reduce global income inequality 16 194 A study of equivalent workers in the United States and 42 developing countries found that median wage gap for a male unskilled 9 years of schooling 35 year old urban formal sector worker born and educated in a developing country is P 15 400 per year at purchasing power parity 195 A 2014 survey of the existing literature on emigration finds that a 10 percent emigrant supply shock would increase wages in the sending country by 2 5 5 17 Remittances increase living standards in the country of origin Remittances are a large share of the GDP of many developing countries 196 A study on remittances to Mexico found that remittances lead to a substantial increase in the availability of public services in Mexico surpassing government spending in some localities 197 Research finds that emigration and low migration barriers has net positive effects on human capital formation in the sending countries 71 72 73 74 This means that there is a brain gain instead of a brain drain to emigration Emigration has also been linked to innovation in cases where the migrants return to their home country after developing skills abroad 198 199 One study finds that sending countries benefit indirectly in the long run on the emigration of skilled workers because those skilled workers are able to innovate more in developed countries which the sending countries are able to benefit on as a positive externality Greater emigration of skilled workers consequently leads to greater economic growth and welfare improvements in the long run 200 The negative effects of high skill emigration remain largely unfounded According to economist Michael Clemens it has not been shown that restrictions on high skill emigration reduce shortages in the countries of origin 201 Research also suggests that emigration remittances and return migration can have a positive impact on political institutions and democratization in the country of origin 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 According to Abel Escriba Folch Joseph Wright and Covadonga Meseguer remittances provide resources that make political opposition possible and they decrease government dependency undermining the patronage strategies underpinning authoritarianism 202 Research also shows that remittances can lower the risk of civil war in the country of origin 213 Research suggests that emigration causes an increase in the wages of those who remain in the country of origin A 2014 survey of the existing literature on emigration finds that a 10 percent emigrant supply shock would increase wages in the sending country by 2 5 5 17 A study of emigration from Poland shows that it led to a slight increase in wages for high and medium skilled workers for remaining Poles 214 A 2013 study finds that emigration from Eastern Europe after the 2004 EU enlargement increased the wages of remaining young workers in the country of origin by 6 while it had no effect on the wages of old workers 215 The wages of Lithuanian men increased as a result of post EU enlargement emigration 216 Return migration is associated with greater household firm revenues 217 Emigration leads to boosts in foreign direct investment to their home country 218 Some research shows that the remittance effect is not strong enough to make the remaining natives in countries with high emigration flows better off 5 Impact on global poverty According to economists Michael Clemens and Lant Pritchett permitting people to move from low productivity places to high productivity places appears to be by far the most efficient generalized policy tool at the margin for poverty reduction 18 A successful two year in situ anti poverty program for instance helps poor people make in a year what is the equivalent of working one day in the developed world 18 A slight reduction in the barriers to labor mobility between the developing and developed world would do more to reduce poverty in the developing world than any remaining trade liberalization 219 Research on a migration lottery allowing Tongans to move to New Zealand found that the lottery winners saw a 263 increase in income from migrating after only one year in New Zealand relative to the unsuccessful lottery entrants 220 A longer term study on the Tongan lottery winners finds that they continue to earn almost 300 percent more than non migrants have better mental health live in households with more than 250 percent higher expenditure own more vehicles and have more durable assets 221 A conservative estimate of their lifetime gain to migration is NZ 315 000 in net present value terms approximately US 237 000 221 A 2017 study of Mexican immigrant households in the United States found that by virtue of moving to the United States the households increase their incomes more than fivefold immediately 222 The study also found that the average gains accruing to migrants surpass those of even the most successful current programs of economic development 222 A 2017 study of European migrant workers in the UK shows that upon accession to the EU the migrant workers see a substantial positive impact on their earnings The data indicate that acquiring EU status raises earnings for the workers by giving them the right to freely change jobs 223 A 2017 study in the Quarterly Journal of Economics found that immigrants from middle and low income countries to the United States increased their wages by a factor of two to three upon migration 224 Innovation and entrepreneurship A 2017 survey of the existing economic literature found that high skilled migrants boost innovation and productivity outcomes 109 According to a 2013 survey of the existing economic literature much of the existing research points towards positive net contributions by immigrant entrepreneurs 225 Areas where immigrant are more prevalent in the United States have substantially more innovation as measured by patenting and citations 226 Immigrants to the United States create businesses at higher rates than natives 227 A 2010 study showed that a 1 percentage point increase in immigrant college graduates population share increases patents per capita by 9 18 percent 228 Mass migration can also boost innovation and growth as shown by the Jewish Huguenot and Bohemian diasporas in Berlin and Prussia 229 230 231 German Jewish Emigres in the US 232 the Mariel boatlift 233 the exodus of Soviet Jews to Israel in the 1990s 118 European migration to Argentina during the Age of Mass Migration 1850 1914 234 west east migration in the wake of German reunification 235 German migration to Russian Empire 236 and Polish immigration to Germany after joining the EU 237 A 2018 study in the Economic Journal found that a 10 increase in immigration from exporters of a given product is associated with a 2 increase in the likelihood that the host country starts exporting that good from scratch in the next decade 238 Immigrants have been linked to greater invention and innovation 239 240 241 242 243 244 According to one report immigrants have started more than half 44 of 87 of America s startup companies valued at 1 billion dollars or more and are key members of management or product development teams in over 70 percent 62 of 87 of these companies 245 One analysis found that immigrant owned firms had a higher innovation rate on most measures of innovation than firms owned by U S born entrepreneurs 246 Research also shows that labor migration increases human capital 73 71 72 74 247 Foreign doctoral students are a major source of innovation in the American economy 248 In the United States immigrant workers hold a disproportionate share of jobs in science technology engineering and math STEM In 2013 foreign born workers accounted for 19 2 percent of STEM workers with a bachelor s degree 40 7 percent of those with a master s degree and more than half 54 5 percent of those with a PhD 249 A number of countries across the globe offer Economic Citizenship Programs where in return for investing into the local economy foreign investors are awarded citizenship Such programs encourage innovation and entrepreneurship from foreign investors and high net worth individuals who as new citizens in the country can offer unique perspectives St Kitts and Nevis was the first country to offer economic citizenship back in 1984 creating a new market for citizenship and by the early 2000s other Caribbean countries joined them 250 Quality of institutionsA 2015 study finds some evidence that larger immigrant population shares or inflows yield positive impacts on institutional quality At a minimum our results indicate that no negative impact on economic freedom is associated with more immigration 251 Another study looking at the increase in Israel s population in the 1990s due to the unrestricted immigration of Jews from the Soviet Union finds that the mass immigration did not undermine political institutions and substantially increased the quality of economic institutions 252 A 2017 study in the British Journal of Political Science argued that the British American colonies without slavery adopted better democratic institutions in order to attract migrant workers to their colonies 253 254 A 2018 study fails to find evidence that immigration to the United States weakens economic freedom 255 A 2019 study of Jordan found that the massive influx of refugees into Jordan during the Gulf War had long lasting positive effects on Jordanian economic institutions 256 WelfareSome research has found that as immigration and ethnic heterogeneity increase government funding of welfare and public support for welfare decrease 257 258 259 260 261 262 Ethnic nepotism may be an explanation for this phenomenon Other possible explanations include theories regarding in group and out group effects and reciprocal altruism 263 Research however also challenges the notion that ethnic heterogeneity reduces public goods provision 264 265 266 267 Studies that find a negative relationship between ethnic diversity and public goods provision often fail to take into account that strong states were better at assimilating minorities thus decreasing diversity in the long run 264 265 Ethnically diverse states today consequently tend to be weaker states 264 Because most of the evidence on fractionalization comes from sub Saharan Africa and the United States the generalizability of the findings is questionable 266 A 2018 study in the American Political Science Review cast doubts on findings that ethnoracial homogeneity led to greater public goods provision 268 Research finds that Americans attitudes towards immigration influence their attitudes towards welfare spending 269 EducationA 2016 study found that immigration in the period 1940 2010 in the United States increased the high school completion of natives An increase of one percentage point in the share of immigrants in the population aged 11 64 increases the probability that natives aged 11 17 eventually complete 12 years of schooling by 0 3 percentage point 270 A 2019 NBER paper found little evidence that exposure to foreign born students had an impact on US born students 271 Studies have found that non native speakers of English in the UK have no causal impact on the performance of other pupils 272 immigrant children have no significant impact on the test scores of Dutch children 273 no effect on grade repetition among native students exposed to migrant students in Austrian schools 274 that the presence of Latin American children in schools had no significant negative effects on peers but that students with limited English skills had slight negative effects on peers 275 and that the influx of Haitians to Florida public schools after the 2010 Haiti earthquake had no effects on the educational outcomes of incumbent students 276 A 2018 study found that the presence of immigrant students who have been in the country for some time is found to have no effect on natives However a small negative effect of recent immigrants on natives language scores is reported 277 Another 2018 study found that the presence of immigrant students to Italy was associated with small negative average effects on maths test scores that are larger for low ability native students strongly non linear and only observable in classes with a high top 20 immigrant concentration These outcomes are driven by classes with a high average linguistic distance between immigrants and natives with no apparent additional role played by ethnic diversity 278 Social capitalThere is some research that suggests that immigration adversely affects social capital 279 One study for instance found that larger increases in US states Mexican population shares correspond to larger decreases in social capital over the period 1986 2004 280 A 2017 study in the Journal of Comparative Economics found that individuals whose ancestors migrated from countries with higher autocracy levels are less likely to trust others and to vote in presidential elections in the U S The impact of autocratic culture on trust can last for at least three generations while the impact on voting disappears after one generation These impacts on trust and voting are also significant across Europe 281 A 2019 study found that humans are inclined to react negatively to threats to homogeneity in the short term However these negative outcomes are compensated in the long term by the beneficial influence of intergroup contact which alleviates initial negative influences 282 HealthSee also Mental health and immigration detention Research suggests that immigration has positive effects on native workers health 283 284 As immigration rises native workers are pushed into less demanding jobs which improves native workers health outcomes 283 284 A 2018 study found that immigration to the United Kingdom reduced waiting times for outpatient referrals and did not have significant effects on waiting times in accident and emergency departments A amp E and elective care 285 The study also found evidence that immigration increased waiting times for outpatient referrals in more deprived areas outside of London but that this increase disappears after 3 to 4 years 285 A 2018 systemic review and meta analysis in The Lancet found that migrants generally have better health than the general population 286 In the EU the use of personal health records for migrants is being tested in the new REHEALTH 2 project 287 HousingA 2014 study of the United Kingdom found that immigration generally reduced local house prices in the areas they moved to because natives at the top of the wage distribution respond to immigration by moving to other areas reducing demand for housing 288 At the national level an increase in the number of immigrants increases house prices 288 CrimeMain article Immigration and crime This section is transcluded from Immigration and crime edit history Immigration and crime refers to the relationship between criminal activity and immigrant communities Research suggests that people tend to overestimate the relationship between immigration and criminality 289 290 291 and that the media tends to erroneously depict immigrants as particularly crime prone 292 The academic literature provides mixed findings for the relationship between immigration and crime worldwide but finds for the United States that immigration either has no impact on the crime rate or that it reduces the crime rate 290 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 A meta analysis of 51 studies from 1994 2014 on the relationship between immigration and crime in the United States found that overall immigration reduces crime but the relationship is very weak 301 The over representation of immigrants in the criminal justice systems of several countries may be due to socioeconomic factors imprisonment for migration offenses and racial and ethnic discrimination by police and the judicial system 302 303 304 305 306 307 The relationship between immigration and terrorism is understudied but existing research suggests that the relationship is weak and that repression of the immigrants increases the terror risk 308 309 310 Research on the relationship between refugee migration and crime is scarce but existing empirical evidence fails to substantiate a relationship between refugee migration and crime 311 312 Bogus recruitment agencies and rogue recruitment agencies make fake promises of better opportunities education income some of the abuses and crimes experienced by immigrants are the followed Employees are forced to work in activities that were not included in their contracts where workplace harassment is openly allowed tolerated and even promoted Workers are forced to work more than 20 hours a day with low wages or no payment Slavery human trafficking Sexual harassment sexual abuse sexual assault sexual exploitation Offering fake immigrant visas in order to make it impossible for employees to return to their countries In many countries there is a lack of prosecution of this crimes since these countries obtain benefits and taxes paid by these companies that benefit the economies and also because of the current shortage of workers 313 314 315 316 Impact on demographic tensionAssimilation A 2019 review of existing research in the Annual Review of Sociology on immigrant assimilation in the United States the United Kingdom France Germany Sweden Norway Belgium the Netherlands and Spain concluded we find an overall pattern of intergenerational assimilation in terms of socioeconomic attainment social relations and cultural beliefs 317 Country of origin Return migration from countries with liberal gender norms has been associated with the transfer of liberal gender norms to the home country 318 United States A 2018 study in the American Sociological Review found that within racial groups most immigrants to the United States had fully assimilated within a span of 20 years 24 Immigrants arriving in the United States after 1994 assimilate more rapidly than immigrants who arrived in previous periods 24 Measuring assimilation can be difficult due to ethnic attrition which refers to when descendants of migrants cease to self identify with the nationality or ethnicity of their ancestors This means that successful cases of assimilation will be underestimated Research shows that ethnic attrition is sizable in Hispanic and Asian immigrant groups in the United States 319 320 By taking account of ethnic attrition the assimilation rate of Hispanics in the United States improves significantly 319 321 A 2016 paper challenges the view that cultural differences are necessarily an obstacle to long run economic performance of migrants It finds that first generation migrants seem to be less likely to success the more culturally distant they are but this effect vanishes as time spent in the US increases 322 A 2018 study found that Chinese nationals in the United States who received permanent residency permits from the US government amid the Tiananmen Square protests and subsequent Chinese government clampdown experienced significant employment and earnings gains relative to similar immigrant groups who did not have the same residency rights 323 During the Age of Mass Migration infant arrivals to the United States had greater economic success over their lifetime than teenage arrivals 324 Europe A 2015 report by the National Institute of Demographic Studies finds that an overwhelming majority of second generation immigrants of all origins in France feel French despite the persistent discrimination in education housing and employment that many of the minorities face 325 Research shows that country of origin matters for speed and depth of immigrant assimilation but that there is considerable assimilation overall 25 Research finds that first generation immigrants from countries with less egalitarian gender cultures adopt gender values more similar to natives over time 326 327 According to one study this acculturation process is almost completed within one generational succession The gender attitudes of second generation immigrants are difficult to distinguish from the attitudes of members of mainstream society This holds also for children born to immigrants from very gender traditional cultures and for children born to less well integrated immigrant families 326 Similar results are found on a study of Turkish migrants to Western Europe 327 The assimilation on gender attitudes has been observed in education as one study finds that the female advantage in education observed among the majority population is usually present among second generation immigrants 328 Share of migrants in all countries Data from 2015 A 2017 study of Switzerland found that naturalization strongly improves long term social integration of immigrants The integration returns to naturalization are larger for more marginalized immigrant groups and when naturalization occurs earlier rather than later in the residency period 329 A separate study of Switzerland found that naturalization improved the economic integration of immigrants winning Swiss citizenship in the referendum increased annual earnings by an average of approximately 5 000 U S dollars over the subsequent 15 years This effect is concentrated among more marginalized immigrants 330 First generation immigrants tend to hold less accepting views of homosexuality but opposition weakens with longer stays 331 Second generation immigrants are overall more accepting of homosexuality but the acculturation effect is weaker for Muslims and to some extent Eastern Orthodox migrants 331 A study of Bangladeshi migrants in East London found they shifted towards the thinking styles of the wider non migrant population in just a single generation 332 A study on Germany found that foreign born parents are more likely to integrate if their children are entitled to German citizenship at birth 333 A 2017 study found that faster access to citizenship improves the economic situation of immigrant women especially their labour market attachment with higher employment rates longer working hours and more stable jobs Immigrants also invest more in host country specific skills like language and vocational training Faster access to citizenship seems a powerful policy instrument to boost economic integration in countries with traditionally restrictive citizenship policies 334 Naturalization is associated with large and persistent wage gains for the naturalized citizens in most countries 335 One study of Denmark found that providing immigrants with voting rights reduced their crime rate 336 Studies on programs that randomly allocate refugee immigrants across municipalities find that the assignment of neighborhood impacts immigrant crime propensity education and earnings 337 338 339 340 341 342 A 2019 study found that refugees who resettled in areas with many conationals were more likely to be economically integrated 343 Research suggests that bilingual schooling reduces barriers between speakers from two different communities 344 Research suggests that a vicious cycle of bigotry and isolation could reduce assimilation and increase bigotry towards immigrants in the long term For instance University of California San Diego political scientist Claire Adida Stanford University political scientist David Laitin and Sorbonne University economist Marie Anne Valfort argue fear based policies that target groups of people according to their religion or region of origin are counter productive Our own research which explains the failed integration of Muslim immigrants in France suggests that such policies can feed into a vicious cycle that damages national security French Islamophobia a response to cultural difference has encouraged Muslim immigrants to withdraw from French society which then feeds back into French Islamophobia thus further exacerbating Muslims alienation and so on Indeed the failure of French security in 2015 was likely due to police tactics that intimidated rather than welcomed the children of immigrants an approach that makes it hard to obtain crucial information from community members about potential threats 345 346 A study which examined Catalan nationalism examined the Catalan Government s policy towards the integration of immigrants during the start of the 1990s At this time the Spanish region of Catalonia was experiencing a large influx in the number of immigrants from Northern Africa Latin America and Asia The Spanish government paid little attention to this influx of immigrants However Catalan politicians began discussing how the increase in immigrants would effect Catalan identity Members of the Catalan parliament petitioned for a plan to integrate these immigrants into Catalan society Crucially the plan did not include policies regarding naturalisation which were key immigration policies of the Spanish government The plan of the Catalan parliament aimed to create a shared Catalan identity which included both the native Catalan population and immigrant communities This meant that immigrants were encouraged to relate as part of the Catalan community but also encouraged to retain their own culture and traditions In this way assimilation of immigrant cultures in Catalonia was avoided 347 A 2018 study in the British Journal of Political Science found that immigrants in Norway became more politically engaged the earlier that they were given voting rights 348 A 2019 study in the European Economic Review found that language training improved the economic assimilation of immigrants in France 349 A 2020 paper on reforms of refugee policy in Denmark found that language training boosted the economic and social integration of refugees whereas cuts to refugees welfare benefits had no impact except to temporarily increase property crimes 350 Discrimination Europe Research suggests that police practices such as racial profiling over policing in areas populated by minorities and in group bias may result in disproportionately high numbers of racial minorities among crime suspects in Sweden Italy and England and Wales 351 352 353 354 355 Research also suggests that there may be possible discrimination by the judicial system which contributes to a higher number of convictions for racial minorities in Sweden the Netherlands Italy Germany Denmark and France 351 353 354 356 357 358 359 A 2018 study found that the Dutch are less likely to reciprocate in games played with immigrants than the native Dutch 360 Several meta analyses find extensive evidence of ethnic and racial discrimination in hiring in the North American and European labor markets 27 26 361 A 2016 meta analysis of 738 correspondence tests in 43 separate studies conducted in OECD countries between 1990 and 2015 finds that there is extensive racial discrimination in hiring decisions in Europe and North America 26 Equivalent minority candidates need to send around 50 more applications to be invited for an interview than majority candidates 26 A 2014 meta analysis found extensive evidence of racial and ethnic discrimination in the housing market of several European countries 27 United Kingdom Since 2010 the United Kingdom s policies surrounding immigrant detention have come under fire for insufficiently protecting vulnerable groups In the early 2000s the United Kingdom adopted the Detention Duty Advice DDA scheme in order to provide free government funded legal aid to immigrants The DDA scheme at face value granted liberty on administrative grounds by considering immigrant merits nature of their work their financial means and other factors that would then determine how much free legal aid detainees were granted Recent research by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development OECD demonstrates that marginalized groups have been barred from legal assistance in detention centers The barriers immigrants face in order to access justice through the DDA disproportionately impacted underrepresented groups of immigrants and the language barrier and lack of interpreters led to further hurdles that detainees were unable to jump through 59 Canada In Canada immigrant detainees face barriers to justice due to a lack of international enforcement Canada s immigration detention system has significant legal and normative problems and the rubric of access to justice that is presented by international law fails to identify these faults There is a lack of access to legal aid for immigrants in detention as well as inhumane treatment in detention centers Research has demonstrated irreparable psychological physical and social damage to immigrants and the international community ignores these injustices 362 United States Business A 2014 meta analysis of racial discrimination in product markets found extensive evidence of minority applicants being quoted higher prices for products 27 A 1995 study found that car dealers quoted significantly lower prices to white males than to black or female test buyers using identical scripted bargaining strategies 363 A 2013 study found that eBay sellers of iPods received 21 percent more offers if a white hand held the iPod in the photo than a black hand 364 Criminal justice system Research suggests that police practices such as racial profiling over policing in areas populated by minorities and in group bias may result in disproportionately high numbers of racial minorities among crime suspects 365 366 367 368 Research also suggests that there may be possible discrimination by the judicial system which contributes to a higher number of convictions for racial minorities 369 370 371 372 373 A 2012 study found that i juries formed from all white jury pools convict black defendants significantly 16 percentage points more often than white defendants and ii this gap in conviction rates is entirely eliminated when the jury pool includes at least one black member 371 Research has found evidence of in group bias where black white juveniles who are randomly assigned to black white judges are more likely to get incarcerated as opposed to being placed on probation and they receive longer sentences 373 In group bias has also been observed when it comes to traffic citations as black and white cops are more likely to cite out groups 367 Education A 2015 study using correspondence tests found that when considering requests from prospective students seeking mentoring in the future faculty were significantly more responsive to White males than to all other categories of students collectively particularly in higher paying disciplines and private institutions 374 According to an analysis of the National Study of College Experience elite colleges may favor minority applicants due to affirmative action policies 375 A 2018 National Bureau of Economic Research paper found that math teachers discriminate against the children of immigrants When the teachers were informed about negative stereotypes towards the children of immigrants they gave higher grades to the children of immigrants 376 As of 2020 2 percent of all students enrolled in U S higher education That comes out to about 454 000 students Fewer than half of the undocumented are eligible for the DACA program DACA is formally known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals 377 Housing A 2014 meta analysis found extensive evidence of racial discrimination in the American housing market 27 Minority applicants for housing needed to make many more enquiries to view properties 27 Geographical steering of African Americans in US housing remained significant 27 A 2003 study finds evidence that agents interpret an initial housing request as an indication of a customer s preferences but also are more likely to withhold a house from all customers when it is in an integrated suburban neighborhood redlining Moreover agents marketing efforts increase with asking price for white but not for black customers blacks are more likely than whites to see houses in suburban integrated areas steering and the houses agents show are more likely to deviate from the initial request when the customer is black than when the customer is white These three findings are consistent with the possibility that agents act upon the belief that some types of transactions are relatively unlikely for black customers statistical discrimination 378 A report by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development where the department sent African Americans and whites to look at apartments found that African Americans were shown fewer apartments to rent and houses for sale 379 Labor market Several meta analyses find extensive evidence of ethnic and racial discrimination in hiring in the American labor market 27 361 26 A 2016 meta analysis of 738 correspondence tests tests where identical CVs for stereotypically black and white names were sent to employers in 43 separate studies conducted in OECD countries between 1990 and 2015 finds that there is extensive racial discrimination in hiring decisions in Europe and North America 26 These correspondence tests showed that equivalent minority candidates need to send around 50 more applications to be invited for an interview than majority candidates 26 380 A study that examine the job applications of actual people provided with identical resumes and similar interview training showed that African American applicants with no criminal record were offered jobs at a rate as low as white applicants who had criminal records 381 See alsoChildhood and migration Criticism of multiculturalism Human migration Immigration and crime Immigration law Immigration reform List of countries by net migration rate List of countries and dependencies by population density Multiculturalism Opposition to immigration People smuggling Repatriation Replacement migration Right of foreigners to vote White genocide conspiracy theory Women migrant workers from developing countriesReferences immigration OxfordDictionaries com Oxford University Press Archived 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