Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pandemic said to slow internatio­nal migration

- EDITH M. LEDERER

According to the report, the United States continued to top the destinatio­n list with 51 million internatio­nal migrants in 2020, representi­ng 18% of the global total. Germany was second, hosting around 16 million internatio­nal migrants, followed by Saudi Arabia with 13 million, Russia with 12 million and the United Kingdom with 9 million.

UNITED NATIONS — A new U.N. report estimates that the covid-19 pandemic reduced the number of internatio­nal migrants by 2 million by the middle of 2020 because of border closings and a halt to travel worldwide — an estimated 27% decrease in expected growth.

Clare Menozzi, principal author of the report by the U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs’ Population Division, said at a news conference Friday that for the second half of 2020, “we have a sense that it will be probably comparable, if not more so.”

She said internatio­nal migration had been projected to grow by 7 million to 8 million between mid-2019 and mid2020.

But the border closures and travel clampdowns starting in March, as the pandemic circled the globe, meant zero growth for four months, and an estimated reduction of 2 million in the expected number of internatio­nal migrants, Menozzi said.

By August, Population Division Director John Wilmoth noted, “there had been more than 80,000 travel restrictio­ns imposed by 219 countries or territorie­s across the world.”

Over the past two decades, growth in the number of internatio­nal migrants has been robust.

Wilmoth said that according to the latest estimates, “the number of internatio­nal migrants worldwide reached 281 million persons in 2020, up from 173 million in 2000.” They account for just 3.6% of the total global population, he said.

Liu Zhenmin, undersecre­tary-general for economic and social affairs, said, “The report affirms that migration is a part of today’s globalized world and shows how the covid-19 pandemic has impacted the livelihood­s of millions of migrants and their families” and undermined progress on achieving U.N. developmen­t goals for 2030.

The economic fallout from the pandemic is expected to reduce remittance­s from people working abroad to low- and middle-income countries from $548 billion in 2019 to $470 billion in 2021, according to projection­s by the World Bank.

Wilmoth said the data confirmed that nearly two-thirds of all internatio­nal migrants were living in high-income countries.

According to the report, the United States continued to top the destinatio­n list with 51 million internatio­nal migrants in 2020, representi­ng 18% of the global total. Germany was second, hosting around 16 million internatio­nal migrants, followed by Saudi Arabia with 13 million, Russia with 12 million and the United Kingdom with 9 million.

India topped the list of countries with the largest diasporas in 2020, with 18 million Indians living abroad. It was followed by Mexico and Russia, each with 11 million outside those countries, China with 10 million, and Syria with 8 million, the report said.

In 2020, it said, women and girls comprised 48% of all internatio­nal migrants. Refugees accounted for 12% of internatio­nal migrants, up from 9.5% in 2000.

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