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Title: Operationalizing Migration Gender Issues:


1
Operationalizing Migration Gender Issues
Evidence and Policies
Andrew R. Morrison, PREM Mirja Sjöblom,
DECRG
2
OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION
  • 1. Background to analytical program on gender and
    migration
  • 2. Presentation of forthcoming volume Women in
    International Migration
  • 3. Future directions for research and policy
  • 4. Operational entry points
  • 5. Where do we go from here? Your input

3
TABLE OF CONTENTS WOMEN IN INTERNATIONAL
MIGRATION
  • I ANALYSIS AND DATA WHERE DO WE STAND?
  • 1. Gender in Economic Research on International
    Migration and Its Impacts A Critical Review
  • 2. Trends in International migration is there a
    feminization of migration flows?
  • II. DETERMINANTS OF MIGRATION AND REMITTANCES
  • 3. Gender and the Determinants of International
    Migration from Rural Mexico Over Time
  • 4. Gender-Specific Determinants of Remittances
    Differences in Structure and Motivation
  • III. IMPACT OF MIGRATION AND REMITTANCES
  • 5. Gender and the Impacts of International
    Migration Evidence from Rural Mexico
  • 6. The impact of remittances and gender on
    household expenditure patterns Evidence from
    Ghana
  • IV. LABOR MARKET PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN MIGRANTS
  • 7. Immigrant Womens Participation and
    Performance in the U.S. Labor Market
  • V. LOOKING AHEAD
  • 6. Future Directions For Research And Policy

4
CHAPTER 1
  • Gender in Economic Research on International
    Migration and Its Impacts A Critical Review
  • Lisa Pfeiffer, Susan Richter, Peri Fletcher and
    J. Edward Taylor
  • Literature review of economic research
  • Main messages
  • Major determinants of migrants are likely to
    differ between men and women
  • hence, it is not suffice to include a dummy
    variable for gender
  • To date almost no research on gender selectivity
    into migration, gender specific impact of
    migration, gendered remittance behavior etc.
  • Few existing studies show structural differences
    between men and women
  • Future focus gender as a central issue for
    understanding migration
  • Support this work with new surveys with gender
    focus
  • gender breakdown remitters, migrants, migrant
    network, respondent

5
CHAPTER 2
  • Trends in International migration is there a
    feminization of migration flows?
  • Juan Carlos Guzmán
  • Presents sex-disaggregated data on flows of
    migration to major destination countries
  • Data Australia (1995-2004), Canada (1981-2001),
    Europe (1985-99) USA (1970-2000)
  • Main messages
  • Sex-disaggregated gender data hard to come by,
    inconsistent and needs to be improved!
  • There has not been a significant feminization of
    migration flows
  • Women have made up almost half of the worlds
    migrant population since the 1960s (stock data
    46.7 percent in 1960, 49.6 percent in 2005)
  • Male-dominate flows Africa, South Asia and the
    Middle East
  • Female-dominated flows East Asia and Pacific,
    Europe and Central Asia, and Latin America
    Caribbean

6
Gender composition of migrant flows to OECD by
origin regions
Male-dominated flows Female-dominated
flows
7
CHAPTER 3
  • Gender and the Determinants of International
    Migration from Rural Mexico Over Time
  • Susan Richter and J. Edward Taylor
  • Mexico National Rural Household Survey used in FE
    and RE models
  • Main messages
  • Women are significantly less likely than men to
    migrate abroad, except for the case of highly
    educated women
  • Networks tend to be gender- and sector-specific
  • Most policy and macroeconomic variables are
    insignificant in explaining migration
  • However, increased boarder expenditures in the
    U.S. significantly deter migration by women but
    does not have a significant impact on male
    migration
  • Overall the determinants of Mexico-to-U.S.
    migration and their changes over time are gender
    specific.

8
CHAPTER 4
  • Gender-Specific Determinants of Remittances
    Differences in Structure and Motivation
  • Manuel Orozco, B. Lindsay Lowell, and Johanna
    Schneider
  • New data on remittances, channeled through formal
    channels, collected in major metropolitan areas
    in Germany, the U.K. and the U.S.
  • Main messages
  • Female remitters from most countries (except for
    Mexico and the Caribbean) remit smaller amounts
    of money than men
  • In total, women remit greater amounts to distant
    family members
  • They also remit more over time
  • Female remittances tend to be spent on food and
    clothing, while male remittances tend to be spent
    for business purposes and to pay off loans
  • Overall, results indicate that female and male
    remittances behavior seem to differ

9
CHAPTER 5
  • Gender and the Impacts of International
    Migration Evidence from Rural Mexico
  • Lisa Pfeiffer and J. Edward Taylor
  • Same data as in chapter 3 in a probit model, IV-
    historical migration rates by gender
  • Main messages
  • Strikingly different impacts of male and female
    migration on production activities
  • Impacts of male migration on household
    production are negative, while those of female
    migration are positive or zero
  • Households receive more remittances from female
    migrants compared to male migrants
  • Households with female remitters spend
    significantly less on education but more on
    health than otherwise similar households

10
CHAPTER 6
  • The impact of remittances and gender on household
    expenditure patterns Evidence from Ghana
  • Juan Carlos Guzmán, Andrew R. Morrison, Mirja
    Sjöblom
  • a) Does the sex of the household (HH) head and
    remittances matter for HH expenditure
    allocations? b) Does the sex of the remitter
    matters for HH expenditure allocations?
  • GLSS 1998/99, fractional logit model
  • Main messages
  • International remittances have a significant
    impact on spending on food, cd goods, housing,
    health and other goods in female-headed
    households (FHH), but not in male-headed
    households (MHH)
  • Internal remittances have a significant impact
    on expenditure share to health and education in
    FHH, but no impact on MHH
  • HH receiving from female remitters have a
    different expenditure pattern than those
    receiving from male remitters once we control for
    the remitters ability to monitor
  • HH with female remitters spend more on health
    and other goods and less on food

11
CHAPTER 7
  • Immigrant Womens Participation and Performance
    in the U.S. Labor Market
  • Çaglar Özden and Ileana Cristina Neagu
  • US Census data from 1990 and 2000
  • What factors influence performance of female
    migrants in US labor market?
  • Performance measures wage income and average
    occupation requirement in the migrants
    occupation
  • Main messages
  • Significant variation of performance of migrants
    from different countries and by educational level
  • Participation is lowest for migrants from South
    Asia, MENA while it is highest for migrants from
    Europe, East and South Asia and Africa
  • Migrants from Latin America have the lowest
    wages
  • Placed in higher skilled jobs Europeans and
    migrants from EN-speaking developing countries
  • Placed in lower skilled jobs Latin Americans and
    Eastern Europeans
  • Most important determinants of participation
    Edu level, yrs in US, children, martial status

12
CHAPTER 8
  • Future Directions For Research And Policy
  • Andrew R. Morrison and Maurice Schiff
  • Summaries most important findings of the volume
  • Explores how these are related to policy
  • Identifies some of the burning research and
    policy issues in this field

13
FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR RESEARCH AND POLICY
  • Migration and empowerment of women
  • Human development impacts of
  • migration (fertility, child welfare)
  • Trafficking of women
  • Brain drain
  • Mode IV and liberalization of service
  • sectors
  • Better measurement of migration flows

14
Migration and empowerment of women
  • To date, work almost exclusively qualitative
  • Operationalization of empowerment difficult
    core related concepts include
  • options, choice, control and power
  • ability to make and influence decisions
  • Research questions
  • Impact of gender equality (beyond wage equality)
    on migration flows in origin and destination
  • Impact of migration on womens empowerment

15
Human development impacts of migration
(fertility, child welfare)
  • Poorer or better educational and other
    developmental outcomes for children income vs.
    parenting effects
  • The accepted wisdom
  • "If one or both parents emigrate, household
    and child-rearing responsibilities fall to older
    adults, second or third degree relatives, or even
    brothers or sisters. In any of these scenarios
    there is a real or potential risk that the
    children will not receive the same health and
    nutritional care, and protection against abuse
    and exploitation, that they would have received
    from their parents,"
  • Nils Kastberg, UNICEF regional director for LAC

16
  • But knowledge about impacts of absent parents
    only for a few countries
  • (El Salvador, Indonesia, Pakistan, Philippines,
    Thailand)
  • Most show better educational outcomes for
    children of migrants similar other developmental
    outcomes (pyschological probs, drugs/alcohol,
    premarital sex)
  • Must be disaggregated by identity of absent
    parent(s) and age/sex of child left behind
  • Policy angle Sri Lankan oddities

17
  • Sri Lanka govt to restrict migration of mothers
  • Thursday, March 8, 2007, 1402 GMT, ColomboPage
    News Desk, Sri Lanka.
  • Colombo The Sri Lankan government plans to limit
    migration of mothers in
  • order to ensure the welfare of their children.
  • It is clear from available statistics and
    various reports that children of many
  • mothers who migrate, especially for employment to
    the Middle East and other
  • countries, have become helpless and vulnerable,
    and lack nutrition and health-
  • care, Cabinet spokesperson Minister Anura
    Priyadharshana Yapa said.
  • Attempting to find a solution, the Sri Lankan
    Cabinet has granted its
  • approval to prohibit of migration for employment
    by mothers with children
  • under five years of age. In the case of mothers
    with children over five years,
  • for the purpose of registration at the Foreign
    Employment Bureau, a report
  • will be required with a recommendation from a
    committee headed by the
  • Divisional Secretary certifying that appropriate
    arrangements have been
  • made with regard to the children. This committee
    can include a Women

courtesy D. Ratha
18
Human development impactscontinued
  • Fertility
  • Good existing work on impact on fertility of
    migrant women (selection, spousal separation,
    income effectssee Lindstrom, 2002
    Brockerhoff/Yang 1994)
  • More work needed on impact on fertility in SOURCE
    countries. Fargues (2007 on Morocco and Turkey
    vs. Egypt) shows that destination matters.
  • Does sex composition of flows matter as well?
  • Family cohesion
  • Informal divorce (Ecuador and Philipines, but
    mostly anecdotal)

19
Trafficking of women
  • No chapter in the migration volume on
    traffickingand no accident
  • But huge policy issueupcoming Bank policy brief
    to explore Banks comparative advantage (HDNSP)
  • Analytical work EWS and impact evaluation?

20
The Brain drain
  • Sex-disaggregated extenstion to Docquier and
    Marfouk DEC database
  • Brain drain and productivity growth (Schiff and
    Wang, 2007)gendered extension?

21
Mode IV and liberalization of service sectors
  • Temporary migration may have a series of
    advantages for both sending and receiving
    countries (vis-à-vis permanent migration)
  • On the research side, two important gender
    issues
  • Sex/occupational composition of Mode IV migrants
  • Over-staying (sex and occupational composition,
    effectiveness of incentive schemes, etc.)

22
Better measurement of migration flows
  • Estimation of share of women in migration flows
    sensitive to type of data used
  • Using Mexican 2000 census data 23
  • Using U.S. 2000 census data 40
  • Why does this matter?
  • Undercounting leads to biased estimates of total
    flows
  • Using destination censuses, leads to biased
    estimates of cross-country distribution of
    migrants if there are differences in
    sex-sequencing or illegality of moves among
    countries

Ibarraran and Lubotsky, 2005
23
OPERATIONAL ENTRY POINTS
  • maximizing the development impact of migration
  • Anti-poverty impact of remittances womens
    access to low-cost remittance channels and
    control over remittances (financial literacy,
    etc.)
  • Financial instruments that earmark expenditures
    (Banco Solidario)
  • Temporary migration (Mode IV)

24
social safety nets for children left behind
  • Sri Lankan solution not optimal.
  • Community and school-based programmingbut be
    clear what is the problem?
  • CCTs targeting households with children left
    behind (again, whats the problem and is response
    non-distortionary?)

25
trafficking
  • Pre-movement (prevention)
  • Movement (border controls)
  • Post-movement/exploitation (i.d. and outreach)
  • Post-exploitation (repatriation)
  • Areas of Bank comparative advantage
  • Source Clert and Gomart, 2005

26
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE YOUR INPUT
  • Peer reviewers for upcoming volume
  • Thoughts on priorities for new analytical and
    operational work

27
THANK YOU !
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