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The Syrian migration crisis

14 April 4:00pm – 5:30pm

At the Civil Society Forum at the Spring Meetings, the Arab Network for Development & the World Bank MENA Team organised a panel discussion on the socio-economic impacts of the Syrian crisis, the outgoing flow of migration and the World Bank’s model on how to tackle these issues following its new report. Highlights of the discussion are reflected here.

Speakers:

Björn Rother, Advisor Middle East & Central Asia Department, International Monetary Fund

Samir Aita, President of the Cercle des Economistes Arabes

Rabie Nasser, Researcher at the Syrian Center for Policy Research

Ahmad Awad, Director of the Phenix Center, Jordan

Shanta Devarajan, MENA chief Economist of the World Bank

Michel Samaha, Affiliated Researcher at the Arab NGO Network for Development (moderator)

Shanta Devarajan:

Björn Rother:

Samir Aita:

Shaping a developmental post-conflict model:

The proposed framework:

1.       Cope now with development of hosting regions

2.       Create incentives for the return of the refugees

3.       Lift general financial sanctions on Syrian now

4.       Think development regionally

5.       Create a decent employment environment

6.       Create positive expectations for post-conflict development

7.       Think local, act global

Shanta Devarajan:

Question and Answer

Participant: We have to be careful with special industrial zones. We have had them in Jordan before and they did not work at all, especially the status of workers there has been controversial. There have been terrible reports of human trafficking etc. and all the owners of these businesses are still complaining their prices are still higher than those of China.

SD: While that is all true, we have now learned a lot from the special industrialised zones we ran. This has been a huge lesson for the Bank. We think this can work for Jordan now because before, they did not have preferential treatment with the EU. Now that is on the table, which can make a big difference in practice, so profits can be made. In terms of labour standards, there is a lot of corporate social responsibility and social standards that are crawling over this issue.

Participant, ITUC: Why do you need export processing zones where labour rights are absent. This discussion does not just take place in the MENA region, this is also an issue in Germany. Especially the IMF often asks for lowering the minimum wage for refugees. We do not think this is the right way to go. The IMF is not talking about integrating people in labour market.

BR: Why the special economic zones? The IMF is not associated with specific proposals like this. But in Jordan you have to look at the context of the local labour market. In Jordan you start with massive degrees of unemployment and informal labour. Then you are not even talking refugee problem but the local economy not generating enough jobs to employ their people. The refugee crisis is just an added problem to that. Just to keep unemployment constant you need massive take up, that is not the situation in Germany.

BR: In terms of integrating refugees in the local labour market, the IMF feels this is much more possible in Europe. The IMFs paper on refugee flows in Europe and how to integrate them in labour markets covers that. The core message of the paper is that there are benefits to integration, and in order to create this beneficial effect integration has to be done well. Conditions which are required for successful integration include training, education, loan subsidies, etc. There is a fundamental economic principle: in order to create sustained employment it has to be profitable. If the wedge between the two is too high, there is a problem. This is the difference between Germany and Jordan. Another alternative is wage subsidies. That’s another discussion. That could help but that is a question of fiscal space, which again a place like Jordan has very little of compared to Germany.