War, conflict and migration
The number of people being forcibly displaced – either internally or across international borders – has grown considerably in recent years. Low and middle-income countries host the vast majority of the world’s refugees, with the three countries that host the most in relative terms all located in the EBRD regions. Attitudes towards refugees have improved since 2021. Ukrainian refugees in Europe have been granted access to labour markets, and survey results suggest that they tend to be satisfied with the help and support they have received from locals, as well as their living conditions, access to education and housing conditions. Ukrainian refugees are more likely to head for places with higher tax revenue per capita and areas that already had large Ukrainian communities before the war.
Introduction
The total number of forced migrants worldwide – people who have been forcibly displaced from their homes as a result of persecution, conflict, violence in general, human rights violations or natural disasters – has grown rapidly in recent years. According to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), that figure reached 87.5 million at the end of 2021, up from just 19.9 million in 1990. That increase in forced migration has outpaced population growth: at the end of 2021, 1.1 per cent of the world’s population had been forcibly displaced, compared with 0.4 per cent in 1990. Developing countries host 75 per cent of the world’s refugees and asylum seekers.1
Source: UNHCR, UNRWA, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) and authors’ calculations.
Note: Figures for IDPs, non-Palestine refugees under the UNHCR’s mandate, Venezuelans displaced abroad and asylum seekers are based on UNHCR data; figures for Palestine refugees are taken from UNRWA data (via the UNHCR). The estimate for 2022 is based on data as at 9 June 2022 and excludes Ukraine. Displaced Ukrainians are estimated at 12.9 million, consisting of 6.3 million refugees and 6.6 million IDPs (as at 3 August 2022). There are no data on IDPs before 1993 or Venezuelans displaced abroad before 2018.
Source: IDMC (2022), UNOCHA and authors’ calculations.
Note: IDP data relating to the war in Ukraine are derived from a UNOCHA estimate as at 3 August 2022.
Forced migration: a global perspective
Record numbers of forcibly displaced people worldwide
The number of forcibly displaced people has grown considerably in recent years (see Chart 2.1). At the end of 2021, a record 87.5 million people had been forcibly displaced worldwide, with that figure estimated to rise to 101 million by the end of 2022. These figures are aggregates of UNHCR estimates for all people in refugee-like situations and IDP-like situations (including asylum seekers, Venezuelans displaced abroad, refugees recognised under the mandate of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) and people displaced by the war in Ukraine).3
At the end of 2021, forcibly displaced people accounted for 1.1 per cent of the global population, roughly equivalent to the population of Türkiye. In the meantime, the invasion of Ukraine is estimated to have displaced almost 13 million people (6.6 million IDPs, plus another 6.3 million who have crossed international borders), making it the largest increase in forcible displacement since the Second World War.
Internally displaced persons
In absolute terms, Ukraine currently has the largest number of IDPs of any country in the world, followed by Syria, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo (see Chart 2.2). All around the world, conflict, violence and natural disasters have driven millions of people from their homes, bringing the total number of IDPs to 59 million as of 2022. Most have been uprooted by conflict and violence (53 million), but storms, floods and other natural disasters have also forced millions of people in 104 economies to flee their homes.4 More than 50 per cent of internally displaced households have children, 57 per cent include elderly family members (defined as people aged 60 and above) and 30 per cent include people with chronic illnesses.
Internationally displaced persons
The total number of internationally displaced people worldwide stood at 36 million at the end of 2021, with current estimates as at August 2022 (which include data for Ukraine) standing at 42 million.5 Four economies of origin (Syria, Ukraine, the West Bank and Gaza, and Venezuela) account for 58 per cent of those internationally displaced people (see Chart 2.3), with other important source economies including Afghanistan and South Sudan. On the whole, people fleeing war and conflict only travel as far as is necessary to get themselves to safety: almost three out of four internationally displaced people are hosted in neighbouring countries.
Source: UNHCR, UNOCHA, UNRWA and authors’ calculations.
Note: This chart shows the top 20 economies of origin for internationally displaced persons. The figure for Ukrainian refugees is as at 3 August 2022; all other figures are as at the end of 2021.
Source: UNHCR, World Bank and authors’ calculations.
Note: This chart shows selected economies with large numbers of internationally displaced people relative to the size of the local population. Figures comprise asylum seekers, Venezuelans displaced abroad, Palestine refugees under the UNRWA’s mandate and refugees under the UNHCR’s mandate as at the end of 2021, plus Ukrainian refugees across Europe as at 19 July 2022.
Source: UNHCR and authors’ calculations.
Note: Figures are as at 19 July 2022. Data on border crossings are only available for countries bordering Ukraine and represent gross inflows; border crossings back into Ukraine (outflows) are not shown. Approximately 17,000 Ukrainian refugees have entered Belarus since 24 February 2022, and 10,000 were in Belarus on 19 July 2022. For countries that do not share a border with Ukraine, data are only shown if the number of refugees exceeds 100,000.
Ukrainian refugees in Europe
At the time of writing (August 2022), the invasion of Ukraine has caused 6.3 million people to flee the country.6 With the exception of its borders with Russia and Belarus, all of Ukraine’s borders have remained open.7 Most refugees used one of the 31 border checkpoints in western Ukraine to enter Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania or the Slovak Republic. While those neighbouring countries initially bore the brunt of the flow of refugees, many refugees have since moved on to other countries (see Chart 2.5).
Attitudes towards refugees
As a result of the global surge in migration and the sometimes sudden and sharp increases in refugee populations across the EBRD regions, the treatment of refugees is a highly divisive policy issue. In order to understand people’s current views on refugees in the EBRD regions, this chapter draws on the results of a representative online survey that was conducted by Ipsos, a public opinion research firm, in April and May 2022. The survey covered more than 20,000 people in 28 economies, with participants being asked the following question: “Thinking about your country, do you agree or disagree with the following [statement]? People should be able to take refuge in other countries, including in [your country], to escape from war or persecution.” The possible responses were “agree”, “don’t know” and “disagree”. That same question had already been asked in a previous survey conducted in May and June 2021.
Source: Ipsos (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: Online survey covering 20,505 respondents between the ages of 16 and 74 in 28 countries, conducted between 22 April and 6 May 2022. Respondents were asked if they agreed with the following statement: “People should be able to take refuge in other countries, including in [your country], to escape from war or persecution.” Data for 2021 relate to an identical question in an earlier survey conducted in May and June 2021.
Determinants of refugees’ migration
With a growing percentage of the global population being forced to leave their countries of origin, it is becoming increasingly important to understand the factors that shape numbers of refugees. Previous research has highlighted the roles played by (i) income differentials between countries of origin and destination, (ii) shared borders and (iii) geographical, linguistic and cultural proximity.8 Linguistic proximity measures the degree of similarity between the languages spoken in different countries,9 while cultural proximity (which is based on data on 60,000 topics of interest cited by 2 billion Facebook users) measures cultural distances between populations.10
Source: UNHCR, Fouquin and Hugot (2016), Gurevich et al. (2021), Marshall et al. (2016), Obradovich et al. (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: This chart reports standardised coefficients derived from a linear regression of numbers of refugees from a given country of origin in a given destination country on various country-level characteristics. The 95 per cent confidence intervals shown are based on robust standard errors.
Ukrainian refugees in Europe: choosing a destination
This section looks at Ukrainian refugees’ choice of destination in response to the invasion of their country. The current refugee crisis stands out in terms of the speed with which it has unfolded. While about 2.5 million people, mostly from Syria, sought asylum in Europe in 2015 and 2016, it took just three weeks for 3 million people to leave Ukraine. European countries have not witnessed such a large displacement of people in such a short period in recent history.
Source: Kantar (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: This chart indicates the percentage of survey respondents who reported that a given factor had influenced their decision to head for a particular location. Other factors include easy access to housing (7 per cent), medical needs (4 per cent), office relocation (1 per cent) and ownership of a second home (1 per cent). Survey data were collected between 14 June and 8 July 2022, with 2,674 respondents in total.
Source: Kantar (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: Survey data were collected between 14 June and 8 July 2022, with 2,674 respondents in total.
Homesickness
Understandably, Ukrainian refugees are experiencing a wide range of challenges, both in relation to the life they have left behind and to their current host country. According to those refugees, the biggest challenges are homesickness and being separated from family members (see Chart 2.10).
Source: Kantar (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: Survey data were collected between 14 June and 8 July 2022, with 2,674 respondents in total.
Source: Kantar (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: Survey data were collected between 14 June and 8 July 2022, with 2,674 respondents in total.
Integration policies for refugees in general
Such support for refugees has not always been forthcoming, despite the fact that refugees often have to flee their home country without much time to prepare and typically seek shelter in the nearest country that can ensure their safety. Compared with economic migrants, whose cross-border journey is often voluntary and better planned, refugees tend to arrive in their host country with worse language skills and less locally applicable human capital. Because of this, and because refugees are often prevented from working by law, they are less likely to be employed than economic migrants (see Box 2.3 for a discussion of claim-processing times and acceptance rates). When they are employed, they tend to earn lower wages than economic migrants in the same host country.14
Source: Wolffhardt et al. (2022) and authors’ calculations.
Note: Based on the provisions that were in place for refugees on 31 March 2021. Scores range from 0 (denoting the least advantageous policies) to 100 (indicating the best policies). “Language learning” refers to language courses for adults.
Firms view refugees’ labour market participation positively
Refugees can make important contributions to their host economies as workers, innovators, entrepreneurs and investors (see Box 2.1), helping to increase the supply of labour. The precise implications for the labour market prospects of the local population will depend on the skill mix of workers, the extent to which local workers and refugees can be substituted for one another, and the willingness of local workers to migrate.
Source: BEEPS Global Supply Chain follow-up survey and authors’ calculations.
Ukrainian refugees in Poland
Poland has taken in more Ukrainian refugees than any other country (see Chart 2.5). Although border crossings into Poland have fallen in number of late, refugees from Ukraine continue to arrive, as displacement and insecurity remains rife across much of Ukraine’s territory. While some people have since left for other European countries, some 1.2 million Ukrainians have opted to seek temporary protection in Poland by registering for a Polish national identification number (PESEL), which facilitates access to healthcare and education, as well as social welfare payments. This section uses PESEL data and other administrative data to provide a snapshot of Ukrainian refugees in Poland.
Overall, 71 per cent of the Ukrainian refugees in Poland are female, and the median age of all refugees is just 22 (see Chart 2.14). This is consistent with the fact that most Ukrainian men between the ages of 18 and 60 are prohibited from leaving the country. Nearly 47 per cent of those refugees are children below the age of 18, and integrating those Ukrainian children into the national school system and providing them with language lessons will be a major challenge.
Source: Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland and authors’ calculations.
Note: Based on registered refugees as at 30 June 2022.
Integrating Ukrainian refugees into Poland’s labour market
Many Ukrainian refugees of working age are keen to work while living in Poland. While refugees face numerous specific challenges, some characteristics of Ukrainian refugees may facilitate their integration into the local labour market, giving them an advantage relative to other groups of refugees. For example, they tend to be highly educated: a survey conducted by the Polish central bank in April and May 2022 indicated that 50 per cent of adult Ukrainian refugees in Poland were educated to tertiary level.18 Moreover, they often have pre-existing social networks that they can rely on (as Poland was already a major destination for Ukrainian migrants seeking temporary work before the war). Nevertheless, more than 50 per cent of refugees have neither prior experience of migration to Poland, nor family members or friends who work in Poland.19
Source: Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland, Polish Ministry of Family and Social Policy, and authors’ calculations.
Note: The percentages indicate the number of work permits issued relative to the number of refugees of working age (15 to 64 years of age). Work permits are either issued to refugees seeking employment or at an employer’s request after a refugee has been employed.
Source: Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland, Polish Ministry of Family and Social Policy, Statistics Poland and authors’ calculations.
Note: For refugees, employment shares are based on the number of work permits active on 30 June 2022 relative to the number of refugees of working age (15 to 64 years of age); for pre-war migrants, they are based on the number of work permits active on 23 February 2022. All figures relate to Ukrainian women only.
Determinants of Ukrainian refugees’ choice of destination and integration in Poland
This next section revisits the determinants of refugees’ choice of destination, this time focusing specifically on the choice of where to reside within Poland. It also examines factors that contribute to the successful integration of refugees in specific geographical locations in terms of employment and education. The findings are based on regression analysis at county level which links the number of Ukrainian refugees as a percentage of the local population with various county-level characteristics (such as personal income tax revenue per capita or the rate of urbanisation; see Box 2.4 for details). The analysis then goes on to look at determinants of the ratio of employed refugees to total refugees by county and the ratio of refugee children enrolled at primary school to total refugees of primary school age.
Source: Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland, Polish Ministry of Family and Social Policy, Statistics Poland and authors’ calculations.
Note: This chart shows the coefficients that are derived from regressing numbers of refugees per capita, refugees’ employment rates and refugees’ school enrolment rates for Polish counties (as at 30 June 2022) on various county-level characteristics. All regressions include dummy variables for regions (each of which is made up of multiple counties). The 95 per cent confidence intervals shown are based on standard errors clustered at county level.
Conclusion
Numbers of displaced people are on the rise, both globally and in the EBRD regions: at the end of 2021, almost 90 million people around the world had been forcibly displaced by persecution, conflict, violence and human rights violations, and that figure is forecast to exceed 100 million by the end of 2022. Low and middle-income countries host 75 per cent of the world’s refugees, with 33 per cent being hosted by economies in the EBRD regions. Internationally displaced persons tend to be younger and better educated than the average person in their country of origin.
The current influx of Ukrainian refugees has the potential to increase the EU’s labour force by an estimated 0.5 per cent by the end of 2022, which would be about twice the size of the increase that followed the influx of refugees via the EU’s southern borders in the period 2015‑16.24 These developments have the potential to partially alleviate labour shortages in Europe’s rapidly ageing economies, provided that mismatches between available jobs and skills can be minimised.
A number of policies can help to ensure that refugees make a meaningful contribution to the economies of their host countries. For example, as documented in previous research, granting immediate access to the labour market is likely to increase refugees’ employment in the future, thereby maximising their contribution to the host country.25 In addition, host countries can facilitate young refugees’ transition from school to work by remedying their lack of knowledge about the country’s labour market through targeted employment services and by promoting participation in and completion of vocational training programmes (Box 2.5 discusses related initiatives in Jordan).26
Leveraging the private sector will be key to improving the resilience of refugees from Ukraine and other countries. To this end, initiatives aimed at supporting refugee-related firms could include training programmes with a view to solving material challenges, improving efficiency and assisting with the development of new products, as well as mentoring support to help firms’ owners to improve their performance. At the same time, host countries’ authorities can work with commercial banks and microfinance institutions to facilitate access to funding in support of refugee-related firms.27
Box 2.1. Refugees can benefit host economies
With millions of Ukrainians fleeing their homeland and seeking safety in neighbouring countries, welcoming refugees is primarily a humanitarian duty. However, it can also prove to be an investment. In their search for safety, refugees bring with them ideas, skills and grit. Some of them, for example, will go on to start new businesses, leverage their cross-border connections and foster innovation in their adopted homelands.
Refugees can facilitate international trade
Refugees’ close ties with family and friends in their countries of origin and members of the diaspora in other countries can also help firms to expand across borders.30 For instance, the millions of refugees from Vietnam who were resettled in the United States of America after the fall of Saigon in 1975 played an important role in establishing trade and investment links between Vietnam and the United States of America in the 1990s.31 Entrepreneurial refugees established the first long-distance telephone services to Vietnam, as well as the first travel agencies arranging trips to Vietnam. Some 20 years on from the end of the Vietnam War, US locations that had hosted more Vietnamese refugees saw more investment in companies in Vietnam and more bilateral exports. Some immigrants established well-known firms, while others were employed by US multinationals. Than Phuc, for example, was the chief executive officer (CEO) of Intel Vietnam, which invested US$ 1 billion in a chip-testing facility in Ho Chi Minh City in the 2000s, creating thousands of jobs.
When refugees return home, they take new skills with them
When they return home, refugees can also assist with the development of their countries of origin by taking new skills and connections with them. For instance, when refugees from the former Yugoslavia returned home after years of working in Germany’s manufacturing sector, they used the experience gained in Germany to increase productivity and exports in their home countries,32 while Vietnamese returnees were an important driving force behind the establishment of Ho Chi Minh City’s tech hub.33
Investing in human capital
On average, refugees also work more hours, earn higher wages and speak better English than economic migrants.34 To some extent, this is because they tend to be better educated than their compatriots who stay at home.35 Experience of forced migration can also incentivise individuals to prioritise investment in human capital, as they have seen their physical assets be destroyed in conflict. For instance, Poles who were forced to move from eastern to western Poland during the Second World War started investing more in education than compatriots living elsewhere in the country, and their offspring did likewise.36
Box 2.2. Refugees’ trust in political institutions
The trust that people place in political institutions plays an important role in shaping societies and economic developments.40 When individuals have little trust in political institutions, they may dismiss government policies as illegitimate and refuse to follow rules. They may even forgo regular political processes and resort to violence in an attempt to force change. For example, trust in political institutions has been shown to have played a major role in determining the effectiveness of the public response to the Covid-19 pandemic.41
(1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Outcome: political trust index | |||||
Exposure to corruption 18-25 | 0.056** | 0.066*** | 0.079*** | 0.071** | 0.094*** |
-0.025 | -0.024 | -0.029 | -0.029 | -0.034 | |
Observations | 8,813 | 8,803 | 8,461 | 8,663 | 8,282 |
Host country fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Country of origin fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Year fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Cohort fixed effects | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Demographic and labour market controls | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Host country × year | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Host country × immigration year | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
Country of origin × year | No | No | No | No | Yes |
Source: European Social Survey, V-Dem, Cross-National Time Series Database and authors’ calculations.
Note: Estimated using linear probability models. Standard errors in parentheses are clustered at the level of pairs of countries of origin and host countries. ***, ** and * denote statistical significance at the 1, 5 and 10 per cent levels, respectively. Political trust is an average of trust in parliament, parties and politicians and ranges from 0 (no trust) to 10 (complete trust). Exposure to corruption18-25 corresponds to the average V-Dem Corruption Index in the country of origin during the period when the individual in question was aged between 18 and 25. Specifications control for age, gender, marital status, educational attainment, religion, employment status, living in an urban area and presence of children under the age of 15 in the household.
Box 2.3. Claim-processing times and acceptance rates
Before being granted refugee status or some other form of international protection, forced migrants must apply for asylum. After submitting a claim for asylum in the destination country, asylum seekers may spend several years waiting for a decision. This box discusses the implications that the administration of asylum claims may have for forced migrants’ selection of destination countries and their integration into society in their chosen host countries.
Asylum policies help to shape flows of refugees
When push factors (such as political persecution, war and natural disasters) force people to flee their homeland, their choice of destination country may be influenced by geographical proximity, economic conditions and a number of other factors (see Chart 2.7). Two of those other factors are the nature of a country’s asylum policies and the manner in which they are implemented. More restrictive asylum policies (for instance, those with narrower definitions of grounds for protection or no provision for the reunification of families) tend to significantly reduce the number of requests for asylum that are lodged in a country.43 Similarly, refugees are more likely to head for countries with shorter claim processing times and higher acceptance rates.44
Acceptance rates and claim-processing times vary widely across countries
Average acceptance rates vary both by country of origin and by destination country. For instance, asylum claims made by applicants from Afghanistan are more successful than those submitted by Turkish citizens (with success rates of 77 and 47 per cent, respectively, in 2021; see Table 2.3.1).45 Asylum claims made by individuals from the EBRD regions are less likely to be accepted than those submitted by applicants from the rest of the world (with acceptance rates of 27 and 52 per cent, respectively, in 2021), while average acceptance rates for claims received by economies in the EBRD regions are broadly similar to those observed in other economies around the world (at 50 and 48 per cent, respectively, in 2021).
The duration and quality of the asylum process can affect refugees’ subsequent ability to integrate into their host economies
The process of seeking asylum can compound the trauma of experiencing conflict and having to flee.48 In the Netherlands, for instance, longer stays in special accommodation for asylum seekers have been found to be associated with lower subsequent levels of employment, increased incidence of mental health problems and greater dependence on social welfare,49 with a similar study in Switzerland showing that longer claim-processing times reduce the probability of refugees going on to secure employment.50
Countries of origin | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EBRD countries | Comparators | Country average |
Group average |
|||||||||||
Türkiye | Ukraine | Georgia | Albania | Egypt | Afghanistan | Central African Rep. | Iraq | Syria | Venezuela | |||||
Destination countries | EBRD countries | Greece | 72% | 0% | 1% | 4% | 78% | 54% | 98% | 48% | 50% | |||
Türkiye | x | 61% | 47% | 53% | ||||||||||
Egypt | 35% | 36% | ||||||||||||
Poland | 1% | 94% | 0% | 42% | ||||||||||
Tajikistan | 98% | 98% | ||||||||||||
Comparators | France | 20% | 5% | 6% | 13% | 21% | 74% | 49% | 43% | 78% | 33% | 27% | 48% | |
Germany | 37% | 7% | 3% | 2% | 27% | 79% | 38% | 90% | 61% | 52% | ||||
Spain | 48% | 25% | 1% | 4% | 100% | 71% | 82% | 29% | ||||||
United States of America | 87% | 34% | 42% | 36% | 74% | 82% | 41% | 64% | 34% | 32% | ||||
Canada | 95% | 81% | 65% | 61% | 74% | 81% | 73% | 87% | 84% | 60% | ||||
Country average | 47% | 36% | 6% | 15% | 30% | 77% | 90% | 99% | 43% | 74% | 49% | |||
Group average | 27% | 52% |
Source: UNHCR (2022c).
Note: This table shows acceptance rates for asylum applications for the top five countries of origin and destination, in terms of the number of applications, in the EBRD regions and the rest of the world. Country averages are simple means indicating either (i) the average acceptance rate for claims submitted by citizens from a particular country of origin across all destination countries or (ii) the average acceptance rate for all claims submitted in a particular destination country. Group averages represent simple means for all EBRD and non-EBRD countries, respectively. The figures presented are total protection rates, indicating all decisions granting protection (not only refugee status under the 1951 Convention, but also complementary protection and other types of protection) as a percentage of total decisions taken in 2021 (see UNHCR, 2022a). Only origin-destination pairs with more than 100 asylum decisions are shown.
Box 2.4. Estimating correlates of refugees’ settlement and integration in Poland
This box provides details of the data and estimation methodology that are used to analyse refugees’ settlement and integration in Poland in Chart 2.17.
Estimation methodology
The analysis of refugees’ choice of location and integration outcomes uses ordinary least squares regressions for county-level observations with fixed effects at the level of subnational regions (equivalent to NUTS 2). For ease of interpretation, all variables are standardised; standard errors are clustered at county level.
Box 2.5. Forced migration: the case of Jordan
Jordan has experienced a massive influx of Syrian refugees since 2011, with more than 675,000 registered refugees in the country at the time of writing. Indeed, refugees currently account for 7 per cent of Jordan’s total population. While an influx of this magnitude has placed significant pressure on the country’s stretched resources, the majority of those refugees have been accommodated in towns and villages, rather than camps. Syrian refugees have been given subsidised access to health centres, paying up to 80 per cent of the standard rate for non-nationals. And since July 2016, the Jordanian government has issued more than 230,000 work permits to Syrian refugees, allowing them to access the labour market.
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