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Lack of Jobs in Africa Could Spark Massive Migration to Europe | |||
2017-01-16 | |||
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The report, from the Geneva-based International Labour Organisation (ILO), states that the economies of developing nations in Arica, Asia, and South America cannot keep pace with the number of young people entering the workforce. The result, especially in Africa, will mean that many are ready to migrate and look for jobs elsewhere – and their main target will likely be Europe Die Welt reports.
Unemployment in Africa currently stands at around eight percent, but the total number of those unemployed will rise by over a million from 37.1 million to 38.3 million, of which nine million are in North Africa. In sub-Saharan Africa, which has some of the highest birth rates in the world, an estimated one-third of all people say they are willing to migrate for work. Some migrants are willing to look for work in neighbouring countries, but for many the ideal destination is Europe; specifically Germany given its current status as the strongest economy in the European Union. Though Germany’s economy is largely positive, the rest of the European Union is struggling to create enough well-paying jobs. In Spain around 400,000 jobs have been created, but many of them are part-time or low skilled, resulting in many young people not able to find careers that match their educational background.
The ILO report’s findings reflect those of an Austrian Army Intelligence report which estimated the possibility of millions of African economic migrants flooding into Europe by 2020. Frontex, the European Union border agency, has also noted the trend towards increased African economic migrantion. Last year they released a report warning that West African countries could soon eclipse the Middle East and Central Asia in terms of the number of migrants coming from those regions. 2016 saw the largest wave of migrants crossing from the African continent into Italy over the Mediterranean sea, but Italian lawmakers have vowed to tackle the issue and begin deportations of migrants who fail their asylum claims or are migrating for purely economic reasons. | |||
Posted by:Steve White |
#8 This "farming," we find, is too feminine; Manlier far -- not for women -- Is sittin' and thinkin', Abetted by drinkin'... And anyways, work is too slimmin'. Snore. |
Posted by: Zenobia Floger6220 2017-01-16 23:19 |
#7 What was that old Dilbert / Far Side carton: 'If people are starving in Africa... they should move to France!'? Guy's the modern-day Nostradamus! |
Posted by: Raj 2017-01-16 13:44 |
#6 no comment from Farming B. Hard? |
Posted by: Frank G 2017-01-16 10:30 |
#5 the reason they are all heading north isn't poverty or lack of food the opposite -- it's that global travel is cheaper plus they have more money with which to travel so they can access the flights and overland travel to get them to the ports where in the past they'd just have to sit in their mud huts and eat dried tilapia. Also, it's only going to be the Muslims coming. That's because they are having 10x as many offspring and are deliberately sending them on Hijra. |
Posted by: anon1 2017-01-16 08:58 |
#4 Why is there no African manufacturing sector with all their raw materials? Yes that is rhetorical. Easier and requiring much less effort is simply killing the farmer and taking his cows to market. Farming be hard and quite labour intense. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2017-01-16 07:52 |
#3 It's; an overabundance of Communist, Fascist, Socialist, et. al. dictators. Why is there no African manufacturing sector with all their raw materials? Yes that is rhetorical. |
Posted by: AlanC 2017-01-16 07:20 |
#2 It's not jobs, it's food. |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2017-01-16 06:17 |
#1 millions of African economic migrants flooding into Europe by 2020 Which of course can be prevented by turning a swath of North Africa and access to the Med into a radioactive 'No Travel' hazard zone. |
Posted by: Skidmark 2017-01-16 05:12 |