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CONTRARY
to popular beliefs, migration, despite the volume of
money it brings, has neither brought rural folks out of
poverty nor is it a sure fire way for farm people to
clamber aboard the prosperity wagon.
“Where
migration is more or less permanent, income from
migration depends on the success of the migrant and the
reason for migration. So migration is not a guaranteed
pathway out of poverty,” the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) said in its
recently released report debunking several myths on
agricultural development.
The
Washington, D.C.-headquartered IBRD, popularly known as
The World Bank, cited in its 386-page report that
“despite massive rural-urban migration, rural poverty
will remain dominant for several more decades in Asia”.
The
bank’’s World Development Report 2008 that focused on
identifying ways for governments to lift some 600
million rural people from extreme poverty has said that
while this has been achieved, it is not due to
migration.
“More
than 80 percent of the decline in rural poverty is
attributable to better conditions in rural areas rather
than to out-migration of the poor,” the report titled
“Agriculture for Development” said.
“So,
contrary to common perceptions, migration to cities has
not been the main instrument for rural [and world]
poverty reduction,” it added.
In fact,
authors of the World Bank report noted that
out-migration of people from rural areas has even
contributed to the constant rate of poverty rate in
cities.
The
report, released October 19, noted while the poverty
rate of $1-a-day has been declining in developing
countries—from 28 percent in 1993 to 22 percent in 2002,
this “has been mainly the result of falling rural
poverty (from 37 percent to 29 percent) while the urban
poverty rate remained nearly constant (at 13 percent).”
The
report also noted that during the period under study,
1993-2002, there was an 81-percent reduction in rural
poverty worldwide. But this is “ascribed to improved
conditions in rural areas; migration accounted for only
19 percent of the reduction.”
Migration, the report said, “lifts some of the rural
poor out of poverty but takes others to urban slums and
continued poverty.”
Notional
EVEN
remittances from abroad are downplayed by the report on
contributing to national poverty rate declines.
While
the report acknowledges that there are “indirect effects
of urbanization on rural poverty through remittances and
rural wage changes,” this is “through tighter rural
labor markets.”
But this
argument, the report’s authors said, has a conservative
but unlikely assumption: all rural-urban migrants are
poor.
The Bank
computed migration’s contribution to rural poverty
reduction using the $2.15 poverty line rather than the
$1.08 extreme poverty line “because it is unrealistic to
think that all migrants are extremely poor.”
Even so,
using the same assumption that all those who migrate are
poor, the report noted that reduction in rural poverty
would still hit 81 percent, “not to migration.”
“Indeed,
almost all the decline in
South Asia and
East Asia is because of a genuine decline in poverty in rural areas.
Even when
China
is excluded from the sample, 67 percent of the reduction
in rural poverty is from causes other than migration,”
the report said.
According to data compiled by the Institute for
Migration and Development Issues (IMDI), there is no
direct correlation between the number of Filipinos going
overseas for temporary or permanent work and stay, and
the poverty incidence levels.
For
example, the National Capital Region, composed of more
than a dozen cities, has posted a 4.3-percent poverty
incidence level in 2003. In an eight-year period
beginning 1998, almost a million overseas Filipinos came
from this region.
However,
the data that the nonprofit group IMDI compiled couldn’t
cite if these Filipinos just used the NCR as temporary
residence prior to going overseas or which rural area
they came from if they, indeed, migrated from farm
villages.
It is
difficult to determine so since the NCR is the reservoir
of major government agencies processing the export of
Filipino labor as well as the receptacle for the air
travel and remittance industries.
Likewise, despite Davao del Sur, for example, posting a
24-percent poverty incidence rate and having recorded
55,117 Filipino migrants, Batanes island posted only a
9.2-percent poverty incidence level despite only 72 of
its residents having left that fishing and farming
province that’s in the northern tip of the Philippines.
Another
example is Pampanga, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s
home province, which posted a 6-percent poverty
incidence level. It is second to the NCR for having the
most number of Filipino migrants at 125,226. Compare
this to Pangasinan, home province of former President
Fidel V. Ramos, which had 111,029 of its citizens
migrating in the eight-year period ending 2005. Still
the province posted a poverty incidence level of 18.6
percent, more than double neighboring Pampanga’s.
With the
exception of Batanes, 14 provinces have poverty
incidence levels above the national average of 25.7
percent.
“The
high poverty levels of these provinces can perhaps
explain why citizens from these areas cannot easily
migrate overseas,” the IMDI scoping study on migrant
philanthropy released last August said.
Impacts
EVEN the
World Bank report admits it is difficult to establish
migration’s direct impact on rural poverty reduction
levels.
“Migration can be a climb up the income ladder for
well-prepared, skilled workers, or it can be a simple
displacement of poverty to the urban environment for
others,” the report noted.
The
report also cited that while remittances from migrants
back to the farm household “can relax capital and risk
constraints, the relationship between migration and
agricultural productivity,” for one, is “complex.”
“The
[temporary] absence of household members reduces the
agricultural labor supply. Agricultural productivity can
therefore fall in the short run but rise in the long run
as households with migrants shift to less labor
intensive, but possibly equally profitable, crops or
livestock,” the report said.
Remittances, the report noted, “often drastically change
the composition of the rural population” and “can pose
[their] own challenges for rural development, because
migration is selective.”
“Those
who leave are generally younger, better educated, and
more skilled. Migration thus can diminish
entrepreneurship and education level among the remaining
population,” the report said.
Likewise, the report cited there are evidence suggesting
migration “is most accessible for the wealthiest and
best educated of the rural population, as moving
requires means to pay for transportation and education
to find a good job.”
“Moreover, better-educated migrants are the most likely
to have a successful migration outcome,” the report
added.
It
particularly cited the Philippines as having more female
migrants to urban areas faring better than the
less-educated males.
The
report estimated some 575 million people migrated from
rural to urban areas in developing countries over the
past 25 years.
Of
these, it said, “400 million lived in transforming
countries, where migration flows increased to almost 20
million a year between 2000 and 2005.”
Migration flows as a share of the rural population have
been traditionally highest in urbanized economies, but
they have fallen over 2000–05 to an annual rate of 1.25
percent. In transforming and agriculture-based
economies, the annual flow of out-migration steadily
increased to 0.8 percent and 0.7 percent of the rural
population, respectively.
The
report also noted that international migration out of
rural areas is male-dominated in
Ecuador and
Mexico,
but female-dominated in the Dominican Republic, Panama
and the Philippines. |