30 Briefing Migration within Africa TheEconomistOctober30th 2021
so. Large swathes of Africa will become
harder to live in. A study in Burkina Faso
finds that, because droughts make people
poorer, they can reduce crossborder mi
gration. Still, the World Bank says that by
2050 over 50m people in subSaharan Afri
ca might move within their own countries
because of climate. The authors do not fo
cus on international migration but note
that many parts of subSaharan Africa that
are expected to be climatemigration hot
spots are close to borders.
Some Africans are forced to flee their
homes. There are 6m refugees on the conti
nent who have crossed a border (and 18.5m
displaced within their own countries).
However, in most countries migrants are
motivated largely by a desire to make a bet
ter living. Less than 1% of those in the Stan
ford analysis said conflict was their main
reason for moving.
Migration presents an opportunity for
Africa. Migrants’ skills and hard work
boost productivity. The taxes they pay fund
public services. They send billions home
in remittances. And when they return, as
many do, they bring back new ideas and
valuable contacts. The question for African
governments is whether they will make it
easier for Africans to move around, or
throw up more barriers. There are some
signs that they are choosing the former.
Standing at the crossroads
African governments can cooperate, as
they showed with a continentwide free
trade agreement that became operational
this year. The African Union, a body that is
much looser than the European Union but
has ambitions to promote more integra
tion, has put forward a protocol that would
allow free movement across Africa. So far,
however, few governments have ratified it.
Some still see migrants as a problem
(much as European governments do). Bar
riers to movement are still high. Border
guards often hassle migrants, delay them
and demand payoffs. Qualifications from
one African country are often not recog
nised in others, leaving nurses selling fruit
in markets. Few states consider migrants
in their urban planning. And sending
money home is absurdly expensive: to
transfer $200 costs about $16, more than in
any other region.
Nonetheless, there are reasons to think
some of these barriers will fall. Africa has a
long history of mobility. Before colonisa
tion, nomads crossed what are now inter
national borders, trade caravans strode the
Sahara, and many Africans migrated dur
ing the dry season before returning with
the rains. When colonies became indepen
dent, some of their leaders, such as Kwame
Nkrumah of Ghana, pushed a panAfrican
ist vision of a borderless continent. His
ideals were neither universally shared nor
consistently upheld by Nkrumah himself.
In 1957 hisgovernmentpasseda deporta
tionactandexpelledNigerianswhowere
helpingtheGhanaianopposition.Between
1958 and 1996 therewere 23 massexpul
sionsofmigrantsby 16 Africancountries.
Still, the panAfrican ideal helped
createtheEconomicCommunityofWest
AfricanStates(ecowas), a groupofformer
British,FrenchandPortuguesecolonies.In
1979 thebloc cameto anagreement on
visafree movement and promised that,
within 15 years,allitscitizenswouldhave
therighttoworkandstarta businessin
anymemberstate.Thatrightstillexists,at
leastonpaper.MrBary,theGuineanbutch
erinSenegal,didnotneeda visa.Hejust
went. It has made “a huge difference”,
agreesMrGavor,thefilmstar.“Ifwehad
moreoftheseunionsthatactuallyworked,
justimaginethethingswecoulddo.”
Therighttovisafreetravelismostlyre
spectedin all 15 ecowasstates, but the
right to dobusiness is not.“Almost all
memberstatesareinviolation,”saysFranz
Celestinoftheiom. Somestatesstilltryto
reserveindustriesforlocals.
Otherregionalblocsalsoallowa mea
sureoffreemovement.Thesixcountries
oftheEastAfricanCommunity(eac) most
lyoffervisafreeentrytoeachother’sciti
zens.Halfhaveeliminatedfeesforwork
permits,too.Regionalblocsinsouthern
andcentralAfricaaretryingtofollowsuit,
butarefurtherbehind.
In South Africa many politiciansare
quicktoblamemigrantsforproblemsat
home.In 2019mobsofarmedmenlooted
andtorchedshopsownedbymigrants.At
least 18 foreignerswerekilled,saysHuman
RightsWatch,anngo. “Thereisxenopho
biaeverydayinSouthAfrica,”saysTimo
thySangweeni(nothisrealname),a Zim
babweanwhomovedin2008.Atpolicesta
tions andclinics if “officials hear your
voiceandseeyourskin colourtheyare
rudeandunhelpfulandtellyouthatyou
don’tbelong,”hesays. But,heconcedes,
“Youareallowedtoaccessservices.” He
firstcamewithoutpapers,butnowhasa
permit,livesinabetterneighbourhood,
andismarriedtoa SouthAfrican.
Others arefedup. AganzeBulonza,a
waiterinKwaZuluNatal,sayshewantsto
gobacktoCongo.“Eventhoughitisnot
stable, it’s better than being in a place
whereyouarenotwanted.”
Anoldgripe
Thecomplaintthatimmigrantstakejobs
fromlocals,ordragdownwages,isespe
ciallyloudinSouthAfrica,wherewages
arehighbyAfricanstandardsandunem
ploymentisrife.Yettheevidenceismixed.
Migrantssometimescompetewithlocals
forjobs,buttheyalsospendmoney,which
createsotherjobs.CostanzaBiavaschiof
theNorwegianUniversityofScienceand
Technologyandcoauthorsfindthat,atthe
locallevel, malemigrationreduces em
ploymentfor nativeSouth Africans,but
nottheirincome(atthenationallevel,it
hasa negativeeffectonSouthAfricans’to
talincome,butnotonemploymentrates).
Buta WorldBankstudy,whichincludesfe
maleworkers,findsthatattheprovincial
level immigration increases both native
employmentandwages.Andtheoecd, a
clubofmostlyrichcountries,findsnew
immigrantsboostemploymentandwages
ofSouthAfricansattheregionallevel.
In most measurable ways, migration
benefits locals. In Africa, it increases
manufacturinginbothsendingandreceiv
ingcountries,findstheunConferenceon
TradeandDevelopment(unctad). Itreck
onsthata 1%increaseinthenumberofmi
grantstoa countryisassociatedwitha 0.2
0.4%increase inmanufacturingoutput,
possibly because they bring skills and
ideas.Thebetter educatedthemigrants,
thebiggertheimpact.
In Ivory Coast migrants contribute
about19%ofgdpdespiteonlybeing10%of
thepopulation.Migrantsaremoreproduc
tivethannatives becausetheyaremore
likelytobeofworkingage.Andtheyoften
Sudan
Ghana
Benin
Mali Niger
Nigeria
Rwanda
Uganda Kenya
Congo
SouthAfrica
Mozambique
Zimbabwe
IvoryCoast
Senegal
Guinea
Liberia
CAR
Burkina
Faso
ECOWAScountries Tanzania EAC
S.Sudan
Mainintra-Africanmigrationroutes*,22
Stockofmigrants,’000
Source: UN DESA *Above 100,000 people
100-249 20-499 00-1m 1m-1.4m
Not wanted
Sub-Saharan Africans, ’000
Sources:Eurostat;IOM
*12monthsorover †Greece,Italy and
Spain(datastartin2017)‡To Sep
1
40
30
20
10
0
2008 1815
EUandBritainwork
permitsgranted*
200
10
100
0
0
2015 21‡
Migrant arrivals via
the Mediterranean†