logo
Why migration must be a priority for decision makers and planners

Why migration must be a priority for decision makers and planners

IOL News2 days ago
In Africa, roughly 80 % of migrants remain within the continent, moving from one African country to another.
Image: James Wiseman/Unsplash
Millions of people are leaving their home countries to permanently live in another country every year. During 2024 the number of international migrants stood at 304 million.
According to the UN definition, a person is considered a migrant if they moved across an international border, changed their country of residence and is living in the receiving country for more than 12 months, regardless of the reason for their migration or the legal immigration status of the person.
Four regions of the world are experiencing significant shifts in the portion of migrants as a share of their total population. In Oceania, 21.5% of the population are migrants, in Northern America it is 15.9%, in Europe 12.6%, and in Western Asia and Northern Africa 9.3%. The top destination countries for migrants between 1990 and 2024 were the United States of America, Germany, Saudi Arabia, United Kingdom, France, Spain, Canada, and the United Arab Emirates.
In some regions of the world, migration is a controversial topic. There are numerous accounts of hostilities against migrants and actions to curb their movement. But, one should not lose sight of the potential benefits that migrants bring. For a host country, migrants could contribute knowledge and skills that are otherwise lacking, and in ageing populations, younger migrants could bring social and economic vitality. Remittances to migrants' countries of origin are making significant contributions to the financial wellness of their families that remained there, and in some cases those remittances make up a considerable portion of the sending country's GDP.
In Africa, roughly 80 % of migrants remain within the continent, moving from one African country to another. These movements fuel urban growth and sustain remittance economies, but also concentrate pressure on services, housing and labour markets in fast-growing cities.
For South Africa, the number of international migrants doubled between 1990 (1.29 million) and 2024 (2.63 million). The number of international migrants moving to South Africa reduced during and after the COVID-19 travel restrictions, but it is picking up again.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad Loading
However, large numbers of South Africans also migrate between provinces. For example, during the period between 2021 and 2026, StatsSA projects that 1.38 million people will move into Gauteng and 0.6 million will leave the province for other provinces within South Africa, while more than half a million people will migrate out of the Eastern Cape, with almost 200 000 migrating into the province.
Looking towards the future, one of the next main drivers of migration on the African continent may stem from the effects of climate change. It may accelerate rural-to-urban migration, turning cities into default safety nets for displaced people. Indications of such shifts are already observable. The northern and western parts of the continent are projected to experience significant desertification. Extreme weather events, like the recent cyclones in Mozambique and flooding in Nigeria's river basins could displace people, many of whom may end up in already overburdened urban settlements. These should not be seen as isolated shocks; they are symptoms of a deeper trend. According to World Bank projections, Africa could see more than 85 million internal climate migrants toward 2050.
Decision makers and planners should take cognisance of how and why people could be moving in future. Our towns and cities are already not keeping up with the influx of people wanting to live there. Moreover, some migrants arrive in a precarious condition that adds to the pressure on already overburdened social support systems and urban infrastructure. Serious foresight-informed action is required, sooner rather than later.
Dr Doris Viljoen is the Director of the Institute for Futures Research at Stellenbosch Business School.
Image: Supplied
Dr Doris Viljoen is the Director of the Institute for Futures Research at Stellenbosch Business School.
*** The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Independent Media or IOL
BUSINESS REPORT
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hunting tourism pumps R44 Billion into South Africa's economy,
Hunting tourism pumps R44 Billion into South Africa's economy,

The Citizen

time31 minutes ago

  • The Citizen

Hunting tourism pumps R44 Billion into South Africa's economy,

Amid global debates on ethical travel and wildlife preservation, a new study from North-West University shines a spotlight on an often-overlooked sector that quietly props up South Africa's rural economy: hunting tourism. In the aftermath of COVID-19, tourism economies the world over struggled to recover. But in South Africa, hunting tourism, both domestic and international trophy hunting, has not only rebounded; it has emerged as a critical economic driver. A new study led by Prof Peet van der Merwe and Prof Andrea Saayman from the North-West University titled Assessing the contributions of hunting tourism to the South African economy: a post‑COVID analysis, calculates hunting tourism's annual contribution to South Africa's economy at a staggering USD2.5 billion, or about R44.03 billion. The figure is not just large, it's transformative. Local hunters, who constitutes mostly middle-aged men from provinces like Gauteng, make up the bulk of this economic activity. With each local hunter spending an average of USD3,594 per season, their collective annual spend tops USD718 million. International hunters, often affluent retirees from the United States, spend far more per trip – an average of USD32,663 – primarily on game, trophies, accommodation, and daily rates. Though fewer in number, their spending adds another USD169 million to the tally. But the significance goes beyond raw expenditure. Employing a Social Accounting Matrix (SAM), the researchers found a production multiplier of 2.97. In lay terms: for every USD1 spent, an additional USD1.97 is generated in economic activity. The ripple effect spreads across agriculture, trade, accommodation, transport, and personal services. Perhaps the most striking finding is employment. Approximately 95 000 jobs in South Africa depend on hunting tourism. Many of these roles such as trackers, farm hands and cleaners require limited formal education, making the sector a vital source of income in a country grappling with a 32.9% unemployment rate. Over 60% of these jobs fall within low-skilled categories, underscoring hunting tourism's outsized impact on South Africa's most vulnerable workers. Hunting tourism's lifeblood flows into rural economies, often bypassed by mainstream tourism. Provinces like Limpopo benefit enormously from the inflow, with private game farms – many converted from struggling livestock operations – thriving through sustainable use. Notably, South Africa's wildlife population on private land now exceeds that in national parks, and the study argues that hunting revenue has underwritten significant rewilding efforts. The researchers also point to a powerful conservation dividend. Contrary to popular belief, regulated hunting creates financial incentives for landowners to protect and repopulate wild species. Without such incentives, many might revert to traditional farming, leading to habitat loss and diminished biodiversity. To some, hunting remains morally fraught. But the study emphasises that economic survival for many rural communities hinges on this industry. Importantly, the research does not gloss over ethical concerns. Instead, it calls for measured policy, recognising hunting tourism's proven contribution to jobs, conservation, and poverty alleviation. Moreover, the sector's resilience post-COVID is telling. As international travel resumes, South Africa has found in hunting tourism a niche that not only endures but thrives. It speaks to a broader shift in post-pandemic tourism: towards immersive, exclusive, and, at times, controversial experiences. With sectors like agriculture, hospitality, and logistics all feeding off the hunting economy, the study urges policymakers to acknowledge and protect this value chain. Legislation around land use, conservation, and hunting quotas must be grounded in economic realities, not just ideological preferences. Missteps could jeopardise both wildlife and livelihoods. Hunting tourism may not be everyone's idea of a sustainable economy. Yet, in South Africa's post-pandemic landscape, it is delivering where others have faltered. It supports rural economies, funds conservation, and employs tens of thousands, many of them low-income workers with few alternatives. In a world seeking green growth with social equity, the rifle may be a more unexpected ally than critics care to admit. At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Parliament slams SA Tourism for underperformance, overspending by R24.1m
Parliament slams SA Tourism for underperformance, overspending by R24.1m

Mail & Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Parliament slams SA Tourism for underperformance, overspending by R24.1m

Tourism Minister Patricia De Lille refuted claims that South African Tourism had irregular tender procurements, to the tune of R100 million, to host flagship trade events including Meeting Africa and Africa's Travel Indaba. (David Harrison) Parliament's portfolio committee on tourism says South African Tourism has underperformed in its mandate to market the country and drive economic growth. 'With the organisational performance of 'It is grossly unacceptable that for the fourth quarter, South African Tourism only achieved 89% of its 55 targets while overspending by R24.1 million on its allocated budget. This depicts 101% over expenditure of R1.45 billion of the R1.43 billion budget that was allocated to SA tourism,' Nalumango said, during a briefing by the agency on its fourth quarter performance report for 2024-25. 'It should be noted that the reported information is the combined efforts of the private sector and government through South African Tourism. It is therefore of paramount importance that South African tourism takes its mandate seriously and improves on its financial and non-financial performance.' In 2024, the Based on the current performance, the sector has the potential to contribute 12.8% to the country's economy by 2030 and create 2.23 million jobs, said Nalumango International tourist arrivals increased by 5.1% to 8.9 million, with foreign spending contributing R91.6 billion to the economy. Domestic tourism also rose, with overnight trips increasing by 6.2% to 40.2 million and spending going up by 12.8% to R137 billion. South African Tourism came under fire last week over allegations of corruption and irregular tender procurements, to the tune of R100 million, to host flagship trade events including Meeting Africa and Africa's Travel Indaba. Tourism Minister 'Their findings were received, reviewed and informed internal consequence management actions. I have been informed by South African Tourism that the cost of both audits were less than R1 million,' De Lille said. 'Officials implicated in procedural violations were removed from procurement committees as part of an internal disciplinary process initiated in 2024. Disciplinary processes are under way.' Last year, the minister De Lille had appointed the new board in February 2024 after dissolving the previous one in April 2023 following its controversial proposals to spend R910 million sponsoring UK football club The parliament portfolio committee said that during the period under review, South African Tourism underperformed in four of its five programmes. It achieved 75% of its corporate support targets with R2.6 million underspent, and 92% of its business enablement targets with R3.1 million underspent. In leisure and tourism marketing, it met 95% of targets but overspent by 55.9%. The business events programme met all eight targets, while the tourist experience programme met two of three targets with R11.8 million underspent. 'This performance is a serious cause for concern as the entity receives more than 50% of Vote 38 [the budget allocation for the tourism department] but it is failing to achieve its targets and underspending in almost all set targets,' said Nalumango. 'It's also of serious concern that SAT did not achieve all the targets in programme three but are reporting to us that they overspent R55.9 million. The performance in programme four also does not make sense — SAT achieved all their targets but underspent 23.7%. In fact there are many things that do not make sense in the fourth quarter performance.' She suggested that the agency does not have effective internal controls to track its financial and non-financial performance, and that it needs to 'seriously' address issues relating to the internal audit function. 'Internal audit function should not just be directed towards the auditing process by the auditor general but should assist the organisation during the in-year execution of its mandate against the set targets and financial management.' Board members will need to improve their oversight and consequence management to hold executives accountable, said the agency's chairperson, Gregory Davids. 'We do have quarterly board meetings, and through our board sub-committee meetings we are interrogating all of these aspects [including] performance reports.' First, we start with our annual performance plan for the year, which we use as our framework to keep the executives accountable … Consequence management in certain areas where there is huge non-performance has taken place.' 'As a board we are listening to portfolio committee members, there are areas we as a board must improve, but we are trying to, through our committees and regular meetings, to hold our executives accountable,' he added.

Why migration must be a priority for decision makers and planners
Why migration must be a priority for decision makers and planners

IOL News

time2 days ago

  • IOL News

Why migration must be a priority for decision makers and planners

In Africa, roughly 80 % of migrants remain within the continent, moving from one African country to another. Image: James Wiseman/Unsplash Millions of people are leaving their home countries to permanently live in another country every year. During 2024 the number of international migrants stood at 304 million. According to the UN definition, a person is considered a migrant if they moved across an international border, changed their country of residence and is living in the receiving country for more than 12 months, regardless of the reason for their migration or the legal immigration status of the person. Four regions of the world are experiencing significant shifts in the portion of migrants as a share of their total population. In Oceania, 21.5% of the population are migrants, in Northern America it is 15.9%, in Europe 12.6%, and in Western Asia and Northern Africa 9.3%. The top destination countries for migrants between 1990 and 2024 were the United States of America, Germany, Saudi Arabia, United Kingdom, France, Spain, Canada, and the United Arab Emirates. In some regions of the world, migration is a controversial topic. There are numerous accounts of hostilities against migrants and actions to curb their movement. But, one should not lose sight of the potential benefits that migrants bring. For a host country, migrants could contribute knowledge and skills that are otherwise lacking, and in ageing populations, younger migrants could bring social and economic vitality. Remittances to migrants' countries of origin are making significant contributions to the financial wellness of their families that remained there, and in some cases those remittances make up a considerable portion of the sending country's GDP. In Africa, roughly 80 % of migrants remain within the continent, moving from one African country to another. These movements fuel urban growth and sustain remittance economies, but also concentrate pressure on services, housing and labour markets in fast-growing cities. For South Africa, the number of international migrants doubled between 1990 (1.29 million) and 2024 (2.63 million). The number of international migrants moving to South Africa reduced during and after the COVID-19 travel restrictions, but it is picking up again. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad Loading However, large numbers of South Africans also migrate between provinces. For example, during the period between 2021 and 2026, StatsSA projects that 1.38 million people will move into Gauteng and 0.6 million will leave the province for other provinces within South Africa, while more than half a million people will migrate out of the Eastern Cape, with almost 200 000 migrating into the province. Looking towards the future, one of the next main drivers of migration on the African continent may stem from the effects of climate change. It may accelerate rural-to-urban migration, turning cities into default safety nets for displaced people. Indications of such shifts are already observable. The northern and western parts of the continent are projected to experience significant desertification. Extreme weather events, like the recent cyclones in Mozambique and flooding in Nigeria's river basins could displace people, many of whom may end up in already overburdened urban settlements. These should not be seen as isolated shocks; they are symptoms of a deeper trend. According to World Bank projections, Africa could see more than 85 million internal climate migrants toward 2050. Decision makers and planners should take cognisance of how and why people could be moving in future. Our towns and cities are already not keeping up with the influx of people wanting to live there. Moreover, some migrants arrive in a precarious condition that adds to the pressure on already overburdened social support systems and urban infrastructure. Serious foresight-informed action is required, sooner rather than later. Dr Doris Viljoen is the Director of the Institute for Futures Research at Stellenbosch Business School. Image: Supplied Dr Doris Viljoen is the Director of the Institute for Futures Research at Stellenbosch Business School. *** The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Independent Media or IOL BUSINESS REPORT

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store