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HOME: POPULATION ISSUES: Meeting Development Goals
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Fast Facts
Migration: A World on the Move

More than 180 million people, 3 per cent of the world’s population, live outside their country of origin. The magnitude and complexity of international migration makes it an important force in development and a high-priority issue for both developing and developed countries.

Internal migration within countries is also on the rise, as people move in response to inequitable distribution of resources, services and opportunities, or to escape violence or natural disaster. The movement of people from rural to urban areas has contributed to the explosive growth of cities around the globe.

While an estimated 10.4 million international migrants are refugees fleeing armed conflict, natural disaster, famine or persecution, the majority of migrants cross borders in search of better economic and social opportunities. Economic migrants are the world’s fastest growing group of migrants. Globalization has increased the mobility of labour, and a decline in fertility and working-age populations in many developed countries is leading to a rising demand for workers from abroad to sustain national economies. New patterns of migration have arisen, and many countries that once sent migrants are now experiencing migrant inflows as well.

People who have migrated without proper authorization account for one third to one half of new entrants into developed countries, according to the International Organization for Migration. Undocumented migrants often face dangerous journeys, exploitation by criminal smuggling networks and difficult working and living conditions and intolerance when they arrive on foreign soil.

The Feminization of Migration

One of the most significant changes in migration patterns in the last half century is that more women are migrating than ever before. Women now constitute half the international migrant population, and in some countries, as much as 70 or 80 per cent. As women migrants frequently end up in low-status, low-wage production and service jobs and often work in gender-segregated and unregulated sectors of the economy, such as domestic work, they are exposed to a much higher risk of exploitation, violence and abuse. Women migrants are particularly vulnerable to human trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation, a multimillion-dollar business. Trafficked women are exposed to sexual violence and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, yet they have little access to medical or legal services.

Migration and Population Growth

High fertility and rapid population growth in some developing countries create pressures to emigrate by taxing infrastructures, education, health and social service systems and the environment. At the same time, migration has become an important component of population growth in countries where fertility has declined. In some parts of Europe and Asia, migration is mitigating population decline resulting from below-replacement fertility and population ageing. Net migration has already either prevented population decline or contributed to population growth in a number of countries.

Migration and Development

Migration is increasingly being perceived as a force that can contribute to development, and an integral aspect of the global development process. Migration considerations are being incorporated into Poverty Reduction Strategies and broader planning policies, and will have an impact on the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals.

Migration is often temporary or circular, and many migrants maintain links with their home countries. While migrants make important contributions to the economic prosperity of their host countries, the flow of financial, technological, social and human capital back to their countries of origin also is having a significant impact on poverty reduction and economic development. Remittances from migrants are a major source of capital for developing countries. Migrants send home at least $90 billion a year, more than developing nations receive in development assistance. Attention is being drawn to measures to counteract the negative affects of 'brain drain', to encourage migrants to invest in their countries of origin and bring their knowledge, skills and technical expertise to the development process.

UNFPA at Work

UNFPA promotes the agenda of the International Conference on Population and Development in the area of migration by promoting policy dialogue and enhancing governments’ ability to respond to issues relating to international migration, to promote orderly migration flows and to address the needs of migrants. The Fund supports research and policy-oriented studies, organizes meetings and assists governments in their capacity to collect migration statistics, including gender-specific data. UNFPA advocates for addressing the special concerns of women migrants, including elimination of discrimination, abuse and trafficking.

UNFPA supports the International Migration Policy Programme (IMP), an inter-agency programme founded in 1998, in its work to foster regional and international cooperation and strengthen the capacity of governments to deal with migration and refugee issues. In October 2004, together with the IMP, UNFPA launched the joint publication Meeting the Challenges of Migration: Progress Since the ICPD at its Round Table on International Migration and Development. The report highlights the linkages between migration and population and development issues, discusses developments since the adoption of the ICPD Programme of Action in 1994 and points to some of the challenges that lie ahead.

In early 2005, UNFPA also convened an Expert Group Meeting “International Migration and the Millennium Development Goals” to analyze migration as both a facilitating and constraining factor in the achievement of the MDGs.

UNFPA works with governments, other UN agencies and non-governmental organizations to meet the emergency reproductive health needs of refugees and internally displaced women. UNFPA also provides reproductive health services and counselling for victims of trafficking, and technical assistance, training, and support to governments and other agencies to develop policies and legal frameworks to combat the problem.

Learn More:
Meeting the Challenges of Migration: Progress Since the ICPD
Trafficking in Women, Girls and Boys: Key Issues for Population and Development Programmes
State of World Population 2004: Migration and Urbanization
International Migration Recognized as Development Force
Survey Reveals Acute Need for Reproductive Health Care in Thailand's Migrant Communities Affected by Tsunami
Extending Help to Migrant Communities Hit by Tsunami
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