Publications /
Policy Paper

Back
The Economic Effects of Refugee Return and Policy Implications
Authors
October 31, 2017

According to the European Union over a million asylum rejected asylum seekers have been ordered to return to their country of origin from Europe alone, or will be soon. To these could be added refugees that have been given temporary shelter but who could be asked to return once conditions in their home country improve. The debate on returning asylum seekers and refugees is nearly always cast in political, legal and humanitarian terms. This paper looks at the question of return strictly from the economic perspective in the advanced countries that receive refugees: is return in their economic interest? Considering all the main economic dimensions – fiscal, economic growth and labor market impact – the answer, for most advanced countries is no. The costs of hosting refugees are front-loaded, while the benefits of hosting them, which are considerable, only accrue over time.

The paper also argues that – on economic grounds alone –mass voluntary return of refugees to their country of origin is highly unlikely even when conditions improve. Development agencies can help countries that are the largest source of refugees recover once conflicts abate and help prevent new refugee crises occurring in the future. However, the expectation that they will promote the return of refugees is unrealistic. Development agencies should not place refugee return as a central objective of their efforts.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    March 7, 2019
    A well-functioning modern infrastructure is essential for social and economic development. It has the power to change the quality of life of populations as well as the prospects of businesses. Despite developing Asia’s remarkable economic performances since the 1980s, the region still faces important difficulties in delivering adequate infrastructure services. “Over 400 million Asians do not have electricity access; 300 million live without safe drinking water and 1.5 billion withou ...
  • Authors
    Mouhamadou Moustapha Ly
    Bertrand Bio Mama
    Onasis Tharcisse A. Guèdègbé
    March 6, 2019
    L’évaluation d’impact des projets et programmes de développement est un exercice qui est de plus en plus adopté dans les pays en développement notamment ceux d’Afrique subsaharienne. Entre autres facteurs explicatifs, il y a la rareté des ressources allouées au développement mais aussi la nécessité de mieux connaître les contraintes structurelles au développement. Saisissant l’occasion de la première conférence de West Africa Capacity building and Impact Evaluation Program (WACIE-3i ...
  • March 5, 2019
    Since coming to power on April 2018, Dr. Abiy seems to be unstoppable, making the world headlines on many occasions. He has embarked the country on an ambitious and transformative project; he has freed thousands of prisoners and established a Reconciliation Commission, has called on the privatization of state-owned enterprises and signed a stunning peace treaty with Eritrea. Furthermore, in a complete shift from the old paradigm of developmental state, the new PM outlined his renewe ...
  • Authors
    March 5, 2019
    China’s economic growth has been in a downslide trend since 2011, while its economic structure has gradually rebalanced toward lower dependence on investments and current-account surpluses. Steadiness in that trajectory has been accompanied by rising levels of domestic private debt, as well as slow progress in rebalancing private and public sector roles. As the ongoing trade war with the US continues to unfold, it remains unclear at which growth pace China’s rebalancing will tend to ...
  • Authors
    Afrique Contemporaine
    February 28, 2019
    Dans son édition n°266, la revue scientifique Afrique Contemporaine consacre son Dossier à la question de l’industrialisation en Afrique. D’après la Rédaction de la publication, le choix de la thématique s’imposait d’autant plus que « la recomposition de l’ordre mondial repose la question de la place du continent à l’échelle planétaire, en l’occurrence sur le plan économique, social et environnemental tout à la fois. » Outre la coordination du Dossier, Dr. Karim Et Aynaoui, Préside ...
  • Authors
    Philippe Chalmin
    February 27, 2019
    Rarement, autant qu’en 2018, les marchés mondiaux de matières premières et de commodités auront été lle jouet non pas des tendances des « fondamentaux » (offre/demande et leur évolution), mais bien des convulsions d’une situation géopolitique mondiale qui, sous la houlette quelque peu déréglée des États-Unis de Donald Trump, a été particulièrement imprévisible. En effet, si 2018 restera dans les annales des marchés, c’est bien parce que les matières premières se sont retrouvées au p ...
  • Authors
    Yassine Msadfa
    February 25, 2019
    La transformation structurelle d’une économie demeure un point de passage nécessaire pour toute nation qui souhaite gravir les échelons du développement, cette transformation est souvent tributaire de la capacité d’une économie à s’ériger d’une société agraire de subsistance, dans son stade initial, vers une économie de productivité. Pour ce qui est du Maroc, le débat a pris de l’ampleur quant à la capacité des dynamiques actuelles à accélérer le rythme de l’activité économique au p ...
  • Authors
    February 20, 2019
    Ce papier évalue les effets asymétriques des cycles économiques sur le chômage et la pauvreté au Maroc, à travers un modèle VAR estimé sur des données trimestrielles allant de 2003 à 2012. Ce modèle inclut les composantes cycliques de quatre variables à savoir : l’output-gap, le salaire minimum réel, le taux de chômage et le taux de pauvreté. Afin de tester la robustesse des résultats, deux versions du modèle VAR ont été estimées, en utilisant les composantes cycliques calculées se ...
  • Authors
    Olalekan Samuel
    Mma Amara Ekeruche
    Adedeji Adeniran
    February 12, 2019
    This study was carried out within the framework of the Global Economic Governance Africa (GEGAfrica) funded by the UK Department for International Development. The GEGAfrica programme is a policy research and stakeholder engagement aimed at strengthening the influence of African coalitions at global economic governance forums and increase, inter alia, the visibility and the outreach of African views at the regional and worldwide levels. Policy Center for the New South was requested ...