“Beyond the Fence” Research Conference
As the Obama Administration begins to consider the key issues of U.S. immigration reform this summer, the Center for Global Development (CGD) and the Center for International Development at Harvard University convened a research conference, “Beyond the Fence: Research Lessons on How Immigration and Remittances Shape Global Development,” on May 26, 2009 with thought leaders from Harvard University, CGD, the University of Chicago, and the World Bank, among others, to offer groundbreaking insights into the links between migration, remittances and prosperity. They were joined by leading voices from the policy community who offered new perspectives on the politics and possibilities of comprehensive immigration reform in the United States.
The event convened thought leaders in migration from across Harvard University, the University of Chicago, the University of Michigan, and the World Bank, among others, to explore policy solutions that would benefit both developed and developing economies.
“We hope to challenge the idea that immigration is a risky proposition for America these days,” said Professor Ricardo Hausmann, CID director. “The potential for win-wins is huge.”
The discussions acknowledged the development opportunity of migration as well as the dysfunction of the current system. New research presented at the conference highlighted the surprising effects of stricter border controls, which often fail to reduce the number of economic migrants and create “mousetrap” incentives that prevent migrants from returning home when labor demand drops because they fear being unable to return as jobs rebound.
Conference papers also spoke to the enormous development gains of migration for both migrants and sending countries. “If you take any people-based measure of well-being, then migration is fantastically good for it,” argued Professor Lant Pritchett, author of Let Their People Come: Breaking the Gridlock on Global Labor Mobility. He quoted World Bank research that allowing just a 3% increase in the immigrant labor force would yield gains of more than $300 billion to citizens of developing countries while also providing a net benefit to citizens of developed countries.
The research also explored the economic benefits of immigration to the U.S., including Professor Michael Kremer’s findings that greater flows of private household workers can improve native welfare and reduce inequality in the U.S. Domestic policy strategies that emerged over the course of the event included a greater focus on designing ethical temporary worker programs that reflect both the needs of receiving countries and the priorities of economic migrants, who are often more interested in mobility and the pursuit of opportunity than full citizenship.
Professor Jeffrey Frankel presented his work on the countercyclical effects of remittances and addressed the topic of temporary workers. “It used to be we were over-focused on the Statue of Liberty and having migrants become citizens,” Frankel said. “I would make it easier to send remittances, easier for workers to go home and then return. The importance to both rich and poor countries is the ‘back and forth’ of labor.”
Download the full conference statement here
To view the agenda, transcripts, presentations and bios, follow this link
Read Bob Hildreth’s remarksĀ here
Follow this link for more photos
June 22nd, 2009 by Editor | Posted in Featured Events | Comments (0)





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