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January 27, 2008
New Mexican Migration Reports
From Frontera NorteSur (FNS): on-line, U.S.-Mexico border news Center for Latin American and Border Studies New Mexico State University Las Cruces, New Mexico:
"Two new studies have reconfirmed the central place of migration in Mexican life. In a new report, the World Bank ranked Mexico as the number one expeller of economic migrants in the world, even ahead of Russia and India. According to the World Bank, 11.5 million Mexico citizens have left their homeland, principally for the United States. Relatively unskilled migrants are not the only ones making the trek north. The World Bank reported that while 2.4 percent of doctors in all of Latin America have emigrated, more than double the percentage of Mexican doctors, or 5 percent, have left their country. The World Bank defines the 2,000-mile border between Mexico and the United States as the biggest "migration corridor" in the world. In its study, the World Bank found that 10.3 million migrants crossed the border zone in a five-year period, putting the region far ahead of the next largest corridor, Russia-Ukraine, where 4.8 million people crossed in a similar time period.
In a second new study, the School of Economics of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) reported a dramatic leap in the number of Mexican households receiving remittances from abroad between 1995 and 2005. According to researchers, the number of such households jumped almost seven-fold from 600,000 to 4.1 million in the 10-year period examined. Researchers estimated that rural migration alone increased 40 percent during the last six years. As in previous studies, the UNAM faculty discovered that little remittance money was invested in long-term economic development projects. Instead, more than three-quarters of all remittances were spent on food, rent and healthcare. Simply put, most money from migrants abroad went to the basic survival needs of recipients back home. What's more, the UNAM study did not find a correlation between increased remittance income and the quality of life in rural zones. Because of low wages and increases in the prices of basic necessities, the study contended that the quality of life of rural residents decreased by 44 percent between December 1, 2000 and December 1, 2007. Given the life-raft function of remittances in Mexico, increasing concern is being voiced by many observers about the potential effects of the wobbling US economy on the economy south of the border. Although some analysts had predicted an absolute decrease in remittances sent from the United States last year because of immigration law crack-downs as well as the economic slowdown, especially in the construction industry, the World Bank study estimated that migrants sent $25 billion in remittances to Mexico in 2007. If accurate, the sum represented a one percent increase above 2006's figure."
Sources: La Jornada (Mexico City), January 20 and January 24, 2008. Articles by Patricia Munoz Rios and Roberto Gonzalez Amador.
KJ
January 27, 2008 | Permalink
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Comments
Great link, KJ. Of note:
'ranked Mexico as the number one expeller of economic migrants in the world, even ahead of Russia and India.'
'little remittance money was invested in long-term economic development projects.'
'the UNAM study did not find a correlation between increased remittance income and the quality of life in rural zones.'
Maybe the average Mexican would be better off if the oligarchy spent more than the piddling amount they do on social services. Of course, raising the needed revenue would upset their robber barons and monopolies so that will never happen so long as they can instead just dump people on the U.S. Expelling excess population + remittances = no change in their inequitable society which is exactly why Mexican elites love the current way of doing things so much and work so hard to perpetuate it.
Posted by: Jack | Jan 28, 2008 9:38:10 PM