Abstract
Recent Middle East migration has created new challenges to both labour-importing and labour-exporting countries. A main concern of the labour-importing countries is demo-economic in nature: how to achieve a desired rate of economic growth without creating an adverse balance between expatriate and national populations. The first part attempts to provide a conceptual frame for such policy analysis illustrated by the case of Kuwait. The second part examines some negative externalities of recent farmers' emigration for Egyptian agricultural productivity. -Author
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Sirageldin, I. (1983). Some issues in Middle Eastern international migration. Pakistan Development Review, 22(4), 217–237. https://doi.org/10.30541/v22i4pp.217-237
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