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swiftcoder 17 hours ago [-]
Fascinating to see that MENA is a net positive on migration. There's often a lot of rhetoric around MENA migration to Europe and North America, but you hear much less about migration to MENA countries.
pjc50 17 hours ago [-]
The Gulf states take in a lot of migrant workers, who have basically no labour rights there.
"The UAE hosts some 8.7 million migrant workers – equivalent to over 80 per cent of the country’s resident population – making it one of the largest foreign labour-receiving countries in the world. With Emirati nationals mainly employed in the public sector, migrant workers constitute the bulk of private sector employment"
jimjimjim 9 hours ago [-]
Yep. When I was in Kuwait, admittedly 20 years ago, there were a LOT of non-kuwaitis there as most manual labor jobs were done by foreign workers. I wouldn't be surprised if it's still the same today.
Cthulhu_ 17 hours ago [-]
I think people underestimate how many people move back to their home country once they have a better chance (through e.g. education or money) and / or when the situation there improves (e.g. stability). It's why I don't understand why the anti-immigration parties don't do more internationally to help other countries.
selicos 9 hours ago [-]
This was a primary goal (if not states) of USAID and related programs. Stem the causes of immigration, support stability, and create goodwill for the donor country.
Still imperialistic and self serving in many ways, but it worked.
On the other hand, I've recently talked with a Polish to US immigrant who was moving back to Poland this summer as jobs and more had improved. They were competitive (in his mind) with the lack of opportunity and anti immigrant thinking across the US today.
readthenotes1 14 hours ago [-]
The reason why pouring money into countries that source immigrants is a questionable solution is graft.
jimkleiber 11 hours ago [-]
Yes, pouring money may not be a very efficient solution and graft can certainly happen. For me it's a combination of how much graft do we allow if we take the long perspective and see it shrinking over time (maybe we dont allow any, cold turkey)? And what are ways we can help change the environments that may not be directly tied to money? From my perspective, we often need (and graft) money the most when we don't trust ourselves and others to help us. So are there ways we can help build deeper relationships so money is not the only focus or way people think they can get help?
12 hours ago [-]
expedition32 16 hours ago [-]
Because we, correctly, assume that some countries are simply beyond saving. Throwing good money after bad.
jimkleiber 11 hours ago [-]
Why "correctly"? Who says that a country or a group of humans or even an individual human is beyond saving?
graphime 11 hours ago [-]
> Who says that a country or a group of humans or even an individual human is beyond saving?
The one doing the saving.
Surely the one needing help should not be the to decide. They will always say “I’m worth saving”.
jimkleiber 8 hours ago [-]
[dead]
AnimalMuppet 15 hours ago [-]
Less cynically, perhaps we correctly realize that some countries are beyond our saving by us throwing money at them.
carlosjobim 12 hours ago [-]
Or move back to your home country once you've gained a beneficial citizenship and can have foreign government benefits paid out every month while you don't even live in that country anymore.
jimkleiber 12 hours ago [-]
Perhaps. I think it's more about the passport ranking so one can travel and also the salary bump. But even if more of the other government services, try living in a country where if you get into a serious car accident you have to pay cash at the ER before they treat you. Scrambling to find multiple thousands of dollars in cash at 3am sometimes. (This happened to my friend in Kenya)
Im not sure if I can blame people for wanting to have more financial or medical security.
slow_typist 10 hours ago [-]
Is it legal to let people suffer or even die at the ER on Kenya if they don’t happen to carry a few k$?
jimkleiber 8 hours ago [-]
Fair point, just looked it up and it seems to be illegal to do that. But in my experience, many probably still do it, or people don't trust that hospitals will follow the law...it may be more of that latter part, not knowing whether they will or won't ask you for money, or whether they will or won't take your insurance. So I think that uncertainty can mean having to be prepared for it anyway.
carlosjobim 11 hours ago [-]
I think a very low percentage of migrants do it so that they can get a better passport for traveling. Sure, there are people who do that also.
jimkleiber 8 hours ago [-]
Fair point. I also think the same group you're talking about is probably not thinking about going back home with just government benefits to sustain them. They probably are more focused on working in countries with higher wages and building big homes back home. I think it tends to be more wage driven than government benefit driven, but I could be wrong.
.. which is a contribution based benefit. There's a lot of (deliberate) confusion between pensions and "welfare" benefits, which are generally not available to either immigrants who have not achieved nationality or to overseas nationals.
People should cite more specific examples if they want to claim otherwise.
bluealienpie 10 hours ago [-]
And if you pay taxes and social security for 20+ years why wouldn’t you be entitled to it? Especially considering you wouldn’t be using expensive programs like Medicare.
carlosjobim 10 hours ago [-]
You don't have to pay taxes nor social security for 20+ years in order to become a citizen in very many countries. You can live on benefits before becoming a citizen and after becoming a citizen. Usually the requirement is that you are a resident for a set number of years in order to become a citizen.
aranelsurion 9 hours ago [-]
> You can live on benefits before becoming a citizen and after becoming a citizen
What benefits? I don't know every country in the world, in Germany unless you count retirement as a benefit (which is something you pay for and have to reach a certain age that is ever moving upwards) you don't get any assistance if you're not living in the country.
carlosjobim 9 hours ago [-]
When was the last time you were called to personally appear and report to the German government, so that they could verify that you are in the country, and not somewhere else?
Benefits aren't collected in cash, they are sent to bank accounts. The beneficiary can be anywhere.
netsharc 5 hours ago [-]
And if they're suspicious, they can ask to check your passport for exit stamps, or receipts from your local supermarket, restaurant, bar, etc... Oh you pay cash and don't get receipts, let's see what the bank statement says which ATMs you withdraw your money from...
inigyou 7 hours ago [-]
Germany has address registration, you have to unregister if you leave the country for more than 3 months and having it inaccurate is a crime.
carlosjobim 3 hours ago [-]
Oh, in Germany it is illegal to break the law? Good to know!
When were you last summoned, or visited at your adress by government officials to verify that you are where you said you'd be?
inigyou 7 hours ago [-]
Most countries have contribution-tested benefits if not means-tested. You definitely can't fast-track citizenship and then start receiving benefits and fuck off.
carlosjobim 3 hours ago [-]
Who's talking about fast tracking? It takes the time it takes. But once you are a citizen, receiving benefits requires much less. You can still receive a lot of benefits without being a citizen. You even have the right to receive benefits as an illegal alien. This in many European countries. And those of you who are typing replies before reading the entire comment, go and check the immigration authority websites of your own country first.
carlosjobim 9 hours ago [-]
Any country that pays out benefits to bank accounts instead of cash-in-hand. When was the last time you as a citizen were summoned to appear in front of a government official so that they could verify that you are in the country.
somenameforme 15 hours ago [-]
Saudi Arabia has one of the highest immigration populations on Earth, somewhere around 42% contrasted against 15.8% in the US (which is an all-time high). They offer huge wages for pretty much everything, have dirt cheap living costs, and like many Mideast countries - there's no taxes for individuals.
profsummergig 12 hours ago [-]
These are expats, not immigrants. They aren't welcome to become citizens in Saudi Arabia.
swiftcoder 12 hours ago [-]
I'm not entirely clear that the migration dataset actually distinguishes between those cases?
profsummergig 11 hours ago [-]
My comment was based on Saudi Arabia's expat policy. Not on the dataset. Saudi Arabia doesn't welcome foreigners moving there to become citizens.
nirav72 16 hours ago [-]
Isn't migration to MENA - specifically migration to North Africa mainly from Sub-Saharan part of Africa?
toasty228 12 hours ago [-]
> Fascinating to see that MENA is a net positive on migration.
Really? it's a big economical hub now, the bulk of it migrate to a few countries, and in these countries just a few cities. It's a very different type of migration too.
Further down the page, there's a link to an article from a couple of years ago, titled "Migration isn’t increasing".
So which is it?
swiftcoder 17 hours ago [-]
There's a quote from one of the study authors:
"Because previous estimation methods relied on coarse five-year snapshots,
they yielded very few data points and created the impression that the rate
of global migration flows was stable," adds co-author Guy Abel, a research
scholar in the Migration and Sustainable Development Research Group of the
IIASA Population and Just Societies Program and professor at the University
of Hong Kong. "Our annual data provides a clearer picture, revealing that
this rate has actually risen since 2000. This upward trend appears to be
driven by long-term demographic shifts and economic development rather than
sudden, isolated crises."
So if I'm following correctly, when you look at coarse data, you miss a lot of the smaller-scale migration, and that small-scale migration pushes the totals up a lot?
bcjdjsndon 16 hours ago [-]
Their dataset is so pathetically small you can't infer anything from it. There are still people alive from the India/Pakistan migration in 48 and that would be number one on this list
mettamage 18 hours ago [-]
As the article points out. The researcher’s site has an exploratory tool to view the data [1].
If you pick 2023/2024 and the UK, you can see the disaster that is the Boris Wave.
3stacks 15 hours ago [-]
Thoughts and prayers friend.
jtbayly 16 hours ago [-]
That tool could be interesting if there was a way to stop the rendered globe from spinning. As is, it is unusable
photochemsyn 15 hours ago [-]
Select the more options pulldown menu, click on projection, select ‘natural Earth’, no spinning.
3stacks 15 hours ago [-]
and it accurately displays the Earth (flat) globecels btfo
sss111 16 hours ago [-]
if you click and hold on a country, it stops spinning :)
dang 13 hours ago [-]
Thanks! We'll put that link in the toptext as well.
nobrains 17 hours ago [-]
Why has , recently, Pakistan been seen added more and more to a new category "MENAP" and separate from South Asia (i.e. India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh) ?
These classifications should be geographic and could even racial, but it seems this new classification (MENAP) seems more "religious"
ricardobeat 17 hours ago [-]
Pakistan being “south asia” makes about as much sense as Turkey and Saudi Arabia being labeled “west asia”. Technically correct, odd choice for modern communication.
t0lo 16 hours ago [-]
Pedantic response that makes light of a real issue. In case you haven't noticed, not every "western" country is actually in the western hemisphere.
kdheiwns 17 hours ago [-]
In America at least, all the hot deserty places between Europe and India=Middle East. I only started hearing the term "South Asia" to refer to places like Pakistan after encountering more non-Americans online. Afghanistan is also considered as part of the Middle East to basically every average American (hence why it's lumped in with all those "Middle Eastern wars"), but I'm not sure if it's seen that way in other areas.
17 hours ago [-]
bcjdjsndon 16 hours ago [-]
Bangladesh is Muslim though
t-3 9 hours ago [-]
Probably because they have been getting closer to those countries, especially since India has started getting closer to Israel.
ricardobeat 17 hours ago [-]
Interesting how South America, with several countries made up majorly of immigrants, receives almost no new migrants now.
Meanwhile the middle-east population is fleeing and being replaced with asians?
Cthulhu_ 17 hours ago [-]
"fleeing" and "replaced" are loaded terms, I don't think you can derive that from this data. That said, there's a lot of workers being imported from Asia to the middle-east for their ambitious construction projects, could that explain it?
bcjdjsndon 16 hours ago [-]
> Meanwhile the middle-east population is fleeing and being replaced with asians?
Persians brought Hinduism to India, so maybe they're returning the favour
rnoises 16 hours ago [-]
Eh? Persians gave the name "Hindus" to the people living in that area. But they had their own religion, Zoroastrianism. They didn't bring Hinduism because they didn't have Hinduism.
bcjdjsndon 15 hours ago [-]
Indians called it hinduism, but it came from iran.
OutOfHere 6 hours ago [-]
It was then the shared pre-Zorastrian Indo-Aryan Vedic religion.
OutOfHere 6 hours ago [-]
Uh. Zoroastrianism was a "reform" of Iran's Indo-Aryan religion that was closer to Vedic Hinduism.
igleria 16 hours ago [-]
At least in Argentina that is because it's not the land of opportunities it used to be in the late 19th/early 20th century.
eloisius 16 hours ago [-]
None of these regions have homogeneous conditions that mean anyone needs to be replacing fleeing locals to explain these stats. Millions of migrant workers are in the Gulf, and many of them come from the Philippines. Millions of people have fled conflicts in other parts of the Middle East.
joseda-hg 16 hours ago [-]
Internal migration has mostly saturated capacity all accross the region in South America
It'll take a while until anyone relaxes
nomilk 17 hours ago [-]
Only 1.7m people left North America in 2023 (4.4m arrivals). Would be interesting to compare to figures from 2025.
arrowsmith 15 hours ago [-]
US had net negative migration in 2025 for the first time in decades:
That’s great, hopefully this accelerates. Too much migration just drives up living costs, stresses medical capacity, and drives wages down for many.
cadamsdotcom 10 hours ago [-]
You’re assuming everything else can’t grow to absorb the demand.
In general it does - new housing, job creation, all of it.
What you’re really seeing is when something - often policy - gets in the way and a place ends up underbuilt.
It’s still a problem but it’s one with different solutions.
nemo44x 9 hours ago [-]
It can but it takes a very long time to bring food online. To develop real estate.
Especially when the real numbers of immigrants is much higher.
It takes time to train more doctors, to raise more cattle, and to build more homes. Way more than the rate of immigration over the last 30 years.
It makes rich families richer though. But it hasn’t been good for working people and the community culture the country once had.
t-3 9 hours ago [-]
More people creates more economic activity and higher productivity, which is deflationary. Fewer people lowers productivity and depresses economic activity, causing inflation. You have it backwards - the real economy is not a closed system with fixed amounts of positions and finite money needing zero sum thinking.
nemo44x 9 hours ago [-]
And it’s a good thing all that wealth is evenly distributed and not hoarded nearly exclusively by a small class of families.
I can assure you mass immigration is not good for the working class families of this country despite what an economist might say in aggregate. The reality is more people drives up the costs of food, shelter, medicine, and other resources that are not very elastic.
Don’t overthink it.
gcanyon 17 hours ago [-]
> interesting
You have a funny way of spelling "sad" my friend.
curiousObject 18 hours ago [-]
People who believe they are financially secure may move from regions which are considered “wealthy” to regions which are seen to be “poorer” (and cheaper). This outflow can influence this data.
Influence how? Migrations from wealthy to poor regions are still migrations, no?
AnimalMuppet 15 hours ago [-]
They are... but the interpretation is different. They aren't looking for opportunity, at least not in the normal sense. And they aren't fleeing oppression in the normal sense either.
firesteelrain 18 hours ago [-]
Can someone explain the graphic?
blondie9x 17 hours ago [-]
The graphic seems vague and not particularly revealing.
firesteelrain 16 hours ago [-]
I was trying to figure out the inflow and outflow. It looks bidirectional.
rawgabbit 16 hours ago [-]
Europe and Central Asia added people. So did North America.
Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan was flat.
Other regions lost people.
FrustratedMonky 16 hours ago [-]
Left to Right.
Leaving, Arriving.
firesteelrain 16 hours ago [-]
In that case the observation is that North America is getting a more diverse set of immigrants
FrustratedMonky 14 hours ago [-]
Is that not happening? I think up till 2026, it was diverse. The diagram doesn't seem incorrect.
firesteelrain 13 hours ago [-]
I don’t think I was saying the diagram was incorrect
nomorehere 15 hours ago [-]
That’s true, but very few countries in the world are willing to accept people as readily as they used to. Migration has become much more difficult since 2022, and I can say that as a migrant myself.
shomp 15 hours ago [-]
Where are the maps?
bcjdjsndon 16 hours ago [-]
*data doesn't go back beyond 2000, safe to ignore
pjc50 16 hours ago [-]
???
Data quality issues usually get worse the further back you go.
WillAdams 16 hours ago [-]
Yes, but there are (in)famous examples such as the partition of Bengal (the tiger which Britain feared) being divided into Pakistan and India, which when included would provide a useful metric for the scale of human suffering involved.
gaiagraphia 17 hours ago [-]
Here's the actual graph/data in question. The article is a dense academic snooooooozefest:
Ffs, trying to click on a country and the globe keeps rotating, hahah. When i click on nations, it doesn't tell me the numbers either, there's just these blobby lines :/
Not very usable.
Milpotel 16 hours ago [-]
Options -> change projection helps a little bit.
gaiagraphia 6 hours ago [-]
Thank you :)
anonli 18 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
somelamer567 17 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
3stacks 15 hours ago [-]
I hope you aren't suggesting Russia is uniquely to blame in this when the United States has displaced tens of millions of people in the last 20 years
somelamer567 15 hours ago [-]
> Whataboutery (also known as whataboutism) is a debating tactic used to evade accountability. Instead of directly addressing a criticism, the accused responds with a counter-accusation or brings up a different, usually unrelated issue (often starting with "What about...?") to distract from the original argument.
I do see this a lot from pro-Russian trolls arguing in bad faith -- and using dirty rhetorical tricks to do so. Please don't stoop to their level.
sosomoxie 12 hours ago [-]
You posted a highly inflammatory claim without evidence. We have plenty of documentation of the US displacing people. Happy to read about Russia doing the same if you post it.
https://www.ilo.org/regions-and-countries/arab-states/united...
"The UAE hosts some 8.7 million migrant workers – equivalent to over 80 per cent of the country’s resident population – making it one of the largest foreign labour-receiving countries in the world. With Emirati nationals mainly employed in the public sector, migrant workers constitute the bulk of private sector employment"
Still imperialistic and self serving in many ways, but it worked.
On the other hand, I've recently talked with a Polish to US immigrant who was moving back to Poland this summer as jobs and more had improved. They were competitive (in his mind) with the lack of opportunity and anti immigrant thinking across the US today.
The one doing the saving.
Surely the one needing help should not be the to decide. They will always say “I’m worth saving”.
Im not sure if I can blame people for wanting to have more financial or medical security.
.. which is a contribution based benefit. There's a lot of (deliberate) confusion between pensions and "welfare" benefits, which are generally not available to either immigrants who have not achieved nationality or to overseas nationals.
People should cite more specific examples if they want to claim otherwise.
What benefits? I don't know every country in the world, in Germany unless you count retirement as a benefit (which is something you pay for and have to reach a certain age that is ever moving upwards) you don't get any assistance if you're not living in the country.
Benefits aren't collected in cash, they are sent to bank accounts. The beneficiary can be anywhere.
When were you last summoned, or visited at your adress by government officials to verify that you are where you said you'd be?
Really? it's a big economical hub now, the bulk of it migrate to a few countries, and in these countries just a few cities. It's a very different type of migration too.
https://www.iom.int/sites/g/files/tmzbdl2616/files/2018-07/M...
So which is it?
[1] https://www.socsc.hku.hk/rhps/global-migration/
These classifications should be geographic and could even racial, but it seems this new classification (MENAP) seems more "religious"
Meanwhile the middle-east population is fleeing and being replaced with asians?
Persians brought Hinduism to India, so maybe they're returning the favour
It'll take a while until anyone relaxes
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2026/01/14/immigra...
In general it does - new housing, job creation, all of it.
What you’re really seeing is when something - often policy - gets in the way and a place ends up underbuilt.
It’s still a problem but it’s one with different solutions.
Especially when the real numbers of immigrants is much higher.
It takes time to train more doctors, to raise more cattle, and to build more homes. Way more than the rate of immigration over the last 30 years.
It makes rich families richer though. But it hasn’t been good for working people and the community culture the country once had.
I can assure you mass immigration is not good for the working class families of this country despite what an economist might say in aggregate. The reality is more people drives up the costs of food, shelter, medicine, and other resources that are not very elastic.
Don’t overthink it.
You have a funny way of spelling "sad" my friend.
https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/american-...
Influence how? Migrations from wealthy to poor regions are still migrations, no?
Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan was flat.
Other regions lost people.
Leaving, Arriving.
Data quality issues usually get worse the further back you go.
https://www.socsc.hku.hk/rhps/global-migration/
Ffs, trying to click on a country and the globe keeps rotating, hahah. When i click on nations, it doesn't tell me the numbers either, there's just these blobby lines :/
Not very usable.
I do see this a lot from pro-Russian trolls arguing in bad faith -- and using dirty rhetorical tricks to do so. Please don't stoop to their level.