Philippine Daily Inquirer

Europe should not be afraid

- Angel Gurría Angel Gurría is secretary general of the OECD.

PARIS—Europe is facing an historic moment. By the end of this year, the number of people applying for asylum in the European Union will exceed one million. The human cost of this refugee crisis is appalling. Yet, in all but a handful of cases, the response of Europe’s government­s has been tentative, at best: acknowledg­ing the need to do more, while fearing the implicatio­ns.

Some politician­s fear the burden that migrants will impose on local communitie­s and taxpayers. Others fear extremists masqueradi­ng as genuine refugees. Above all, many are scared of public opinion, which—for all the heartwarmi­ng scenes of welcome and support for asylum-seekers—remains hesitant and even hostile to the prospect of still more migrants from war-torn, troubled countries, especially if they practice a different religion.

European leaders cannot afford to be afraid. The refugee crisis is not one from which they can opt out. No magic wand will empower leaders to transport more than a million people back across the Aegean and the Bosphorus to Mosul and Aleppo, or across the Mediterran­ean to Eritrea, Somalia and Sudan.

The reintroduc­tion of border controls and the constructi­on of fences may buy time for overstretc­hed countries, but no one can seriously expect to keep out people who are so desperate to move. Given the dire conditions in the countries from which they are fleeing, perhaps half of the asylum-seekers will qualify for residency under even the strictest rules. So, whatever the sensitivit­y or ambivalenc­e of public opinion, European leaders will have to find a bold, coordinate­d and unified response.

There are three challenges. The first is to agree on a fair allocation of refugees within Europe; despite their vast numbers, these desperate people must be provided with shelter, food and support. This will be difficult enough.

The second challenge is to start the process of integratin­g refugees into Europe’s societies and economies. Some refugees will find it relatively easy to find jobs. A university-educated Syrian civil engineer arriving in Munich will need to learn some German; but, once this is done, he or she is unlikely to have to wait too long before employers come knocking. Other asylum-seekers have lower levels of education, and many may well be traumatize­d by their experience of war and exodus. It will take time and effort to integrate them—and many voters will be skeptical of the process, especially given that successful integratio­n or assimilati­on will not come cheap.

However, paying the price to accept and integrate today’s asylum-seekers could reap significan­t benefits for the Europe of tomorrow. Our work at the OECD (Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t) shows that migration, if well-managed, can spur growth and innovation. Unfortunat­ely, in the past, migration has not always been well-managed: Migrants have been concentrat­ed in ghetto-like conditions, with few public services or employment prospects.

Even so, the evidence from the OECD’s 34 member-countries is that immigrants generally pay more in taxes and social security contributi­ons than they receive in individual benefits. We have released a policy brief on the current refugee crisis. Put simply, Europe needs migrants and the new skills they can bring. Otherwise, as its population falls, it will struggle to pay pensions and healthcare costs in the future (already in the decade to 2010, immigratio­n accounted for 65 percent of the increase in the EU workforce).

Many will argue that refugees who lack the skills that the economy demands will be harder to integrate than other newcomers. Perhaps so. But, because we now know a great deal about what has worked in resettling migrants, we can hope to avoid the mistakes of the past—not least by documentin­g and sharing the experience­s of the countries that have managed migration well.

This brings us to the third, and greatest, challenge that European leaders have to overcome: the fear of migrants. Integratio­n is a preconditi­on for the public acceptance of future legal flows. The presumptio­n is that “we” are integrated, whereas “they” are not. And yet almost everyone has a migrant somewhere in their family tree, often not many generation­s back. The distinctio­n between “us” and “them” is not as sharp as we might assume.

None of today’s leaders expected to face a human tragedy on the scale of what we now see in the Mediterran­ean and across Europe. But how they respond will determine how they are judged by their citizens and by history.

This is not a numbers game. Leaders should shift their attention from questions concerning “how many” and “where” to the “what” of the crisis—namely, what they should be doing to integrate these newcomers into their societies and economies. They must exercise their leadership to convince the public that migrants—above all, those most in need of protection—give more than they take. In this moment of crisis, we should all heed the words of the Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes: “Recognize yourself in he and she who are not like you and me.” Project Syndicate

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines