MPI Europe Webinar

   

Turning the Tide: Addressing the long-term challenges of EU mobility for sending countries


Thursday, 5 December 2019
15:00 CET (Brussels, Warsaw) / 14:00 BST (London) / 9:00 A.M. ET (New York, DC)
 
  

SPEAKERS
Liam Patuzzi,
Policy Analyst, Migration Policy Institute Europe

Bernhard Perchinig, Senior Research Officer, International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD)


Marcin Wiatrów,
Chief Expert, Labour Migration Policy Unit, Ministry of Family, Labour and Social Policy, Poland

MODERATOR
Meghan Benton
, Director of Research, Migration Policy Institute (MPI) Europe

LOCATION
MPI EUROPE WEBINAR 
  

More than a decade after EU eastern enlargement, some eastern Member States are still grappling with the consequences of large-scale emigration for their communities, economies, and societies. Emigration may come with certain advantages: it can relieve pressure in situations of high unemployment, generate remittances, and allow mobile EU citizens to pursue better job opportunities and living conditions. In the long run, however, brain drain, demographic decline, and eroding tax bases can put a massive strain on countries of emigration, and may even trigger a downward spiral that ultimately stands in the way of EU convergence.

Amid ongoing debates about the costs and benefits of free movement, this Migration Policy Institute Europe webinar will examine new evidence from the EU-funded REMINDER (Role of European Mobility and Its Impacts in Narratives, Debates and EU Reform) project on different types of East-West mobility. Among the topics for discussion: mobility of care workers, short-term cross-border movement in frontier regions, and return migration to countries of origin—and their impact on sending countries’ communities and societies. Speakers will examine big-picture trends of East-West migration; consider possible policy responses at regional, national, and EU levels to alleviate some of the challenges; and reflect on realistic actions that could be taken under a new European Commission.
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For more information
[email protected] 
www.migrationpolicy.org

     

Migration Policy Institute Europe
Residence Palace
155 Rue de la Loi, 5th Floor
1040 Brussels

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