Friday, November 22, 2019
Advantages of Skilled Worker Migration
Advantages of Skilled Worker Migration Doctors Without Borders ââ¬Å"Doctors Without Bordersâ⬠, written by Charles Kenny, discusses the advantages of allowing skilled workers to migrate from a ââ¬Å"poorâ⬠state into a ââ¬Å"richâ⬠state and vice versa. Kenny also states that when medical doctors are allowed to migrate and work in other states it can cause all of the states involved to benifit. His main point in this article is that allowing skilled workers to migrate would boost the global economy and lower poverty rate in lower class states where the individual migrant workers migrated from. Kenny uses key facts regarding migrant workers total income to strengthen his argument. He states that between 1985 and 2005, the amount of foreign high income citizens in a state has jumped to nearly 10 percent. Kenny says ââ¬Å"Thatââ¬â¢s great news for the rich states that benefit from their skills, of course. But as it turns out, it is also great news for the poor countries the migrants leave behindâ⬠. Kenny states that every immigrant on average sends approximately six thousand dollars in remittance per year to their home country. Also when migrant workers immigrate, they increase the trade between the two states by ten percent (Kenny 2). With this remittance, migrant workers can cut down poverty by nearly one third percent in low class countries (Kenny 2). Another fact that Kenny uses to prove his point is the booming IT industry in India. Kenny says that because so much information about technology was transmitted back to India in the 1990ââ¬â¢s it has caused over 2.5 million people to be hired for IT work. The final point that Charles Kenny uses in his article is that the United States is moving in the opposite direction regarding this topic. Kennyââ¬â¢s opinion toward the United States and its idea about this article is this, ââ¬Å"It is hard to find a more confused discussion than that surrounding ââ¬Ëbrain drainââ¬â¢. Opposition to unskilled migration is usua lly based on perceived self-interest, the threat of stolen jobs ââ¬â a misguided fear, but at least a rational one.â⬠Kenny says And at the other end of the degree process, there is growing concern about a ââ¬Å"reverse brain drain,â⬠as more foreign graduates from U.S. schools decide to return home rather than find jobs in America ââ¬â again, often on account of byzantine immigration rules. Meanwhile, the U.S. House Appropriations Committee has proposed deep cuts to State Department international exchange program budgets that support the Fulbright program, among others. This shortsightedness regarding a program that promotes the talent trade in both directions isnââ¬â¢t just bad news for the development prospects in Africa or Asia; itââ¬â¢s likely to convert into a further erosion of Americaââ¬â¢s long-term productivity. The idea of doctors without borders has also affected the international system and its main actors tremendously. It has caused an incre asing number of politicians to being favoring immigration and bringing attention to the gains an individual state in the international system can create for itself on the individual scale within the state. For individual states in the international system, this topic draws much interest. Nearly every state in todayââ¬â¢s global economy would like to strengthen themselves economically. With the increase of knowledgeable, skilled, migrant workers, individual states citizens will have more inspiration to acquire higher paying jobs. Kenny says that this is possible due to the amount of remittance sent back to a migrantââ¬â¢s home state. ââ¬Å"If the amount of remittance sent to a migrantââ¬â¢s home state was doubled, it would lower the poverty rate and begin to balance the national economy. The amount of money sent back to home countries would triple the amount of foreign aid sent in the past year. This topic also effects individual global state on a more national level. As a growing number of educated immigrant workers enter into a country, non-governmental organizations will be strengthened. Fields of study like healthcare and technology would be improved drastically. For example intergovernmental organizations regarding workers of a skilled background can be strengthened by the increase of skilled migrant workers. In the global scale, the admittance of migrant workers into states needing skilled labor can benefit not just the country with the migrant worker, but the whole global community. On a lower scale, organizations located inside a state can be boosted also. With the increase of skilled migrants, organizations like IDCIââ¬â¢s, NDGO, SCOS, and many other non-governmental organizations can benefit by the increase of foreign workers.
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