Global population movements from 1990 to 2023
Posted by tzury 6 days ago
Comments
Comment by Supernaut 6 days ago
So which is it?
Comment by swiftcoder 6 days ago
"Because previous estimation methods relied on coarse five-year snapshots,
they yielded very few data points and created the impression that the rate
of global migration flows was stable," adds co-author Guy Abel, a research
scholar in the Migration and Sustainable Development Research Group of the
IIASA Population and Just Societies Program and professor at the University
of Hong Kong. "Our annual data provides a clearer picture, revealing that
this rate has actually risen since 2000. This upward trend appears to be
driven by long-term demographic shifts and economic development rather than
sudden, isolated crises."
So if I'm following correctly, when you look at coarse data, you miss a lot of the smaller-scale migration, and that small-scale migration pushes the totals up a lot?Comment by bcjdjsndon 6 days ago
Comment by swiftcoder 6 days ago
Comment by pjc50 6 days ago
https://www.ilo.org/regions-and-countries/arab-states/united...
"The UAE hosts some 8.7 million migrant workers – equivalent to over 80 per cent of the country’s resident population – making it one of the largest foreign labour-receiving countries in the world. With Emirati nationals mainly employed in the public sector, migrant workers constitute the bulk of private sector employment"
Comment by jimjimjim 5 days ago
Comment by Cthulhu_ 6 days ago
Comment by selicos 5 days ago
Still imperialistic and self serving in many ways, but it worked.
On the other hand, I've recently talked with a Polish to US immigrant who was moving back to Poland this summer as jobs and more had improved. They were competitive (in his mind) with the lack of opportunity and anti immigrant thinking across the US today.
Comment by readthenotes1 6 days ago
Comment by jimkleiber 6 days ago
Comment by newaccountman2 5 days ago
Well, I think I can help you out with that...
Comment by carlosjobim 6 days ago
Comment by jimkleiber 6 days ago
Im not sure if I can blame people for wanting to have more financial or medical security.
Comment by carlosjobim 6 days ago
Comment by jimkleiber 5 days ago
Comment by slow_typist 5 days ago
Comment by jimkleiber 5 days ago
Comment by slow_typist 4 days ago
Comment by inigyou 6 days ago
Comment by pjc50 5 days ago
.. which is a contribution based benefit. There's a lot of (deliberate) confusion between pensions and "welfare" benefits, which are generally not available to either immigrants who have not achieved nationality or to overseas nationals.
People should cite more specific examples if they want to claim otherwise.
Comment by carlosjobim 5 days ago
Comment by swiftcoder 5 days ago
Of course pensions aren't contingent on being in-country, but I have trouble picturing the same bureaucracy being less anal about other government benefits.
Comment by carlosjobim 5 days ago
Comment by bluealienpie 6 days ago
Comment by carlosjobim 6 days ago
Comment by aranelsurion 5 days ago
What benefits? I don't know every country in the world, in Germany unless you count retirement as a benefit (which is something you pay for and have to reach a certain age that is ever moving upwards) you don't get any assistance if you're not living in the country.
Comment by carlosjobim 5 days ago
Benefits aren't collected in cash, they are sent to bank accounts. The beneficiary can be anywhere.
Comment by netsharc 5 days ago
Comment by inigyou 5 days ago
Comment by carlosjobim 5 days ago
When were you last summoned, or visited at your adress by government officials to verify that you are where you said you'd be?
Comment by inigyou 5 days ago
Comment by inigyou 5 days ago
Comment by carlosjobim 5 days ago
Comment by expedition32 6 days ago
Comment by jimkleiber 6 days ago
Comment by graphime 6 days ago
The one doing the saving.
Surely the one needing help should not be the to decide. They will always say “I’m worth saving”.
Comment by jimkleiber 5 days ago
Comment by AnimalMuppet 6 days ago
Comment by somenameforme 6 days ago
Comment by profsummergig 6 days ago
Comment by swiftcoder 6 days ago
Comment by profsummergig 6 days ago
Comment by nirav72 6 days ago
Comment by toasty228 6 days ago
Really? it's a big economical hub now, the bulk of it migrate to a few countries, and in these countries just a few cities. It's a very different type of migration too.
https://www.iom.int/sites/g/files/tmzbdl2616/files/2018-07/M...
Comment by mettamage 6 days ago
Comment by gadders 6 days ago
Comment by 3stacks 6 days ago
Comment by jtbayly 6 days ago
Comment by photochemsyn 6 days ago
Comment by 3stacks 6 days ago
Comment by sss111 6 days ago
Comment by dang 6 days ago
Comment by nobrains 6 days ago
These classifications should be geographic and could even racial, but it seems this new classification (MENAP) seems more "religious"
Comment by ricardobeat 6 days ago
Comment by t0lo 6 days ago
Comment by kdheiwns 6 days ago
Comment by t-3 5 days ago
Comment by bcjdjsndon 6 days ago
Comment by ricardobeat 6 days ago
Meanwhile the middle-east population is fleeing and being replaced with asians?
Comment by Cthulhu_ 6 days ago
Comment by bcjdjsndon 6 days ago
Persians brought Hinduism to India, so maybe they're returning the favour
Comment by rnoises 6 days ago
Comment by bcjdjsndon 6 days ago
Comment by OutOfHere 5 days ago
Comment by bcjdjsndon 5 days ago
Comment by OutOfHere 5 days ago
Comment by igleria 6 days ago
Comment by eloisius 6 days ago
Comment by joseda-hg 6 days ago
It'll take a while until anyone relaxes
Comment by nomilk 6 days ago
Comment by arrowsmith 6 days ago
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2026/01/14/immigra...
Comment by nemo44x 6 days ago
Comment by t-3 5 days ago
Comment by nemo44x 5 days ago
I can assure you mass immigration is not good for the working class families of this country despite what an economist might say in aggregate. The reality is more people drives up the costs of food, shelter, medicine, and other resources that are not very elastic.
Don’t overthink it.
Comment by t-3 5 days ago
This claim is contrary to all common sense. When stores sell lots of certain products, they order more and run sales to attract more customers, they don't raise prices. The supply shocks with eggs and inflation of food prices were driven by disease, war and the opportunism of monopolistic agricultural industries, not because people are buying too much food. Outside of cities, where housing development is usually a political/legal zoning issue, houses are expensive because they've become assets and investments rather than places to live. Apartments are also increasingly monopolized by national and multinational corporations. Housing prices are linked to the population density, but most of the inflation in prices is driven by other factors. There's more than enough housing and space to build housing. Artificial scarcity won't go away by deporting a few people. Some brand name medicines are certainly subject to supply and demand, but I highly doubt immigrants are having a large influence on prices.
Comment by cadamsdotcom 6 days ago
In general it does - new housing, job creation, all of it.
What you’re really seeing is when something - often policy - gets in the way and a place ends up underbuilt.
It’s still a problem but it’s one with different solutions.
Comment by nemo44x 5 days ago
Especially when the real numbers of immigrants is much higher.
It takes time to train more doctors, to raise more cattle, and to build more homes. Way more than the rate of immigration over the last 30 years.
It makes rich families richer though. But it hasn’t been good for working people and the community culture the country once had.
Comment by gcanyon 6 days ago
You have a funny way of spelling "sad" my friend.
Comment by curiousObject 6 days ago
https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/american-...
Comment by swiftcoder 6 days ago
Influence how? Migrations from wealthy to poor regions are still migrations, no?
Comment by AnimalMuppet 6 days ago
Comment by firesteelrain 6 days ago
Comment by blondie9x 6 days ago
Comment by firesteelrain 6 days ago
Comment by rawgabbit 6 days ago
Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan was flat.
Other regions lost people.
Comment by FrustratedMonky 6 days ago
Leaving, Arriving.
Comment by firesteelrain 6 days ago
Comment by FrustratedMonky 6 days ago
Comment by firesteelrain 6 days ago
Comment by bcjdjsndon 6 days ago
Comment by pjc50 6 days ago
Data quality issues usually get worse the further back you go.
Comment by WillAdams 6 days ago
Comment by nomorehere 6 days ago
Comment by gaiagraphia 6 days ago
https://www.socsc.hku.hk/rhps/global-migration/
Ffs, trying to click on a country and the globe keeps rotating, hahah. When i click on nations, it doesn't tell me the numbers either, there's just these blobby lines :/
Not very usable.
Comment by Milpotel 6 days ago
Comment by gaiagraphia 5 days ago
Comment by shomp 6 days ago
Comment by anonli 6 days ago
Comment by somelamer567 6 days ago
Comment by 3stacks 6 days ago
Comment by somelamer567 6 days ago
I do see this a lot from pro-Russian trolls arguing in bad faith -- and using dirty rhetorical tricks to do so. Please don't stoop to their level.
Comment by sosomoxie 6 days ago