Mode 4 of the GATS Taking Stock Moving ForwardWTO .ppt
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1、,Mode 4 of the GATS Taking Stock & Moving ForwardWTO Symposium 22-23 September 2008,Mina Mashayekhi, Head, UNCTAD TNCDB, Geneva,Outline,Development Benefits of Migration Some figures Triple benefits of migration Zooming in on “Mode 4” Services sector Temporary movement Categories of movement covered
2、 in schedules Way Forward Ensuring pro-development movement Overcoming reluctance in receiving countries Co-operation, co-development & solidarity frameworks,The Case for Liberalizing Migration,Todays Reality of Migration,200 million people live outside their country of birth in todays economic real
3、ity movement is increasingly taking place for delivering services there is a global competition for skills more pro-active migration management policies,The Case for Liberalizing Migration,Calculations cover more than GATS-type movements which is limited to temporary movement for the provision of se
4、rvices Estimated gains vary, but they are significant, expected to exceed gains from liberalization of merchandise trade, have pro-development distributional implications Examples include double world income if full liberalization of movement (Whalley, 1984),The Case for Liberalizing Migration,USD 2
5、00 billion annually if multilateral temporary work visa scheme (quota for skilled & unskilled DC workers at 3 % of IC labour force for 3-5 years) (Rodrik, 2002) USD 156 billion annually (world welfare gains) (that is 0.6 % of world income) if IC increase quota for workers entry from DC by 3 per cent
6、 (Winters 2001, 2003, 2005 etc.) 15 67 % of world GDP worldwide efficiency gains when eliminating global restrictions on labor mobility (UN-WIDER, 2003) global output gain USD 356 billion by 2025 if DC migration equal to 3 per cent of IC labour force (Worldbank, 2006),How to Improve Data on Mode 4 ?
7、,Interagency Task Force on Statistics of International Trade in Services (OECD, EC Commission, IMF, UNCTAD, UNSD, UNWTO/OMT & WTO/OMC),The Case for Liberalizing Migration,Greater benefits promised by lower-skilled movement: Some figures: while movement of labour can generate gains (15 67 % of world
8、GDP) movement of only skilled labour would generate much smaller gains (3 11 % of world GDP) (UN-WIDER, 2003) ICs & DCs to benefit more from liberalization of restrictions on low-skilled labour than on skilled labour low-skilled temp migrant from DCs would gain USD 38 billion & their remittances wou
9、ld more than offset their original low contribution to home output, so welfare of those remaining behind also rises (Winters 2002),The Case for Liberalizing Migration,Greater benefits promised by lower-skilled movement: Additional sources of benefits: irregular migration is concentrated among lesser
10、 skilled, hence more benefits from regularizing such movement less potential for brain drain, more brain gain lower skill levels comparatively more restricted, hence greater gains from liberalization potential to build on bilateral labour movement schemes which frequently cover activities at lower s
11、kill levels migration of low-skilled workers is usually beneficial; low skilled migration has contributed to poverty alleviation; findings on impact of high-skilled emigration are mixed (Worldbank 2006),Push & Pull Factors Costs & Benefits,Pull factors demographic changes, labour market needs, highe
12、r wages Push factors poverty, unemployment, lack of economic & political stability Balance in potential costs & benefits varies across countries, level of skills & economic, social specificities varies for: sending & receiving country & migrant Need to ensure movement that generates pro-development
13、outcomes crucial: multi-stakeholder approach, involving sending & receiving countries, migrants, employers & unions,Country of Origin: Benefits,Additional benefits derive from remittances (among largest sources of external finance for DCs, USD 240 billion, 2007) relieve from unemployment experience
14、& skills acquired poverty alleviation & gender empowerment (MDG) investment of remittances & Diaspora investments into building productive capacities increasing trade flows entrepreneurship & business climate “social remittances“ e.g., impact of migrants on ideas, behaviors & social capital in sendi
15、ng country,Country of Origin: Challenges,but benefits are not automatic & potential challenges include loss of human capital & public investment in education emigration rate of tertiary-educated: as high as 81 % health workers e.g., Ethiopia, Uganda, Zambia, Liberia loss of fiscal revenue large remi
16、ttance flows may lead to currency appreciation & adverse effects on exports dependency on remittances social disintegration,Country of Destination: Benefits,Benefits for destination countries include steady supply of needed workers, bridging shortages of personnel e.g., health, key infrastructure se
17、rvices, business services, including IT enhanced productivity (including lower prices) & essential services delivery migrants serve as links to business opportunities in sending countries responds to need of business sector/employers (agriculture, IT etc.),Country of Destination: Challenges,but ther
18、e are common “fears” associated with migration loss of jobs wages being pulled down drain on social resources security political “unattractiveness”,Migrants: Benefits,Migrants bear principal risks & potentially reap largest rewards but are often ignored in policy discussion Migrating individuals hop
19、e to gain through: access to employment wage differential (to sustain family at home) enhanced skills social exposure safer, legal migration from DCs,Migrants: Challenges,but there are also challenges social disintegration & long periods of separation from families brain waste potential for abuse, p
20、articularly for lower skilled & female workers inability to accumulate real savings no integration in host country - not welcome by society,Zooming in on Mode 4,Zooming in on Mode 4,Gains from Mode 4 liberalization expected to be substantial: size of the services sector e.g., services contribution t
21、o GDP: 72 % in IC & 52 % in DCs services sector covers wide range of activities where (temporary) migration is - or could occur e.g. professional, computer-related, health, construction, tourism, agriculture-related & transport services, or other seasonal activities,Zooming in on Mode 4,Temporary/ci
22、rcular migration expected to generate particular development benefits Country of origin pro-development benefits, but less potential of brain drain; brain gain upon return Country of destination filling labor market needs without bringing full challenges of immigrant integration UN High Level Dialog
23、ue on Migration & Development Global Forum on Migration & Development 2008, Manila: ”Protecting & Empowering Migrants for Development” Roundtable 2 “Empowering Migrants and Diaspora to Contribute to Development” 2007, Brussels, focusing on circular migration, e.g. Roundtable 1.4, “ How can circular
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