
(Telegraph Media Group/Matt)
March  16, 2009 
From  construction laborers to Harvard-educated bankers, foreign workers are being  forced to return home as once-booming economies around the world contract.  Globally, 24 million to 52 million people could lose their jobs in 2009, according to the  International Labor Organization's latest estimates. And populist sentiment and  protectionist moves in countries which relied on foreign laborers during the  boom years have put 200 million migrant workers internationally in the  crosshairs.
Examples  of the new protectionism abound: The United States enacted a law in 2009imposing strict  restrictions on hiring of skilled immigrant workers by companies receiving  government bailout money. 
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Experts  dub this deglobalization. Some analysts also express fears of a reverse brain  drain. Examining skilled immigrant contributions to the United States, Duke  University professor Vivek Wadhwa notes immigrants founded a quarter (Issues  in Science and Technology) of all U.S. engineering and technology  companies between 1995 and 2005, including half of those in Silicon Valley. 
CFR's  Matthew Slaughter says skilled immigrants can help revive the economy by  creating more jobs in the 
In the  short term, experts worry about protectionist measures and job loss sending  migrants home and curtailing levels of migration from origin to destination  countries. This would result in reduced remittances which, when coupled with  increased unemployment in countries of origin, prompt fears of social and political  upheaval. 
The  World Bank says global remittances are expected to fall (PDF) by 0.9 percent in 2009, but  could fall by as much as 6 percent if the economic situation worsens. The  International Organization for Migration also warns against the risk of rising xenophobia (PDF) "based on the false  perception" that migrants steal jobs from local workers.
In the  long-term, writes Stephen Castles, co-author of the book The Age of  Migration, the motivation to migrate (PDF) in times of recession may  be even higher than before, and remittances may prove a resilient form of  international transfer. He also argues global economic inequality and the  demographic imbalances between the ageing populations of the North and massive  working-age people in the South remain important factors in generating future  migration.
The  recent fall in arrests (LAT) of illegal immigrants at the  U.S.-Mexico border raises question: Will a poor labor market in developed  economies deter illegal immigration? Experts appear divided. Some, in fact,  think tighter immigration laws in traditional destination markets will merely  strengthen black-market activity.
To  respond effectively to the financial crisis, economists generally argue against  rich countries barring their doors to migrants. In October 2008, UN  Secretary General Ban Ki-moon stressed migration can help lift the world out of  its economic crisis."Now more than ever, politicians and policymakers need to cooperate across borders," he said. 
There  are also demands for reforming immigration laws that do not discourage skilled  labor, but at the same time secures borders. In a new interviewwith CFR.org,  former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff says 
Source: http://www.cfr.org/publication/18768/dangers_of_deglobalization.html
 
 

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