In the ancient port of Marseille, the air is full of the sounds of trade taking place. Algerian merchants, Italian fishermen, and Syrian entrepreneurs crowd the bustling markets that have for centuries brought various cultures together.
In stark contrast, a few hundred kilometres north, in the dilapidated industrial towns of northern France, excess migration evokes dread. Worries about overburdened clinics and crowded schools fuel populist anger. Migration, it thus seems, is a paradox—an engine of growth or a source of division, depending on one’s point of view.
Indeed, in societies with high levels of migration, two camps, each armed with its own immutable truths, can be distinguished. One sees migrants as the lifeblood of modern economies—plugging labour shortages while fuelling innovation. The other warns of mounting social costs, cultural erosion, and overloaded welfare systems. Moral appeals flounder in this divide, unable to bridge the gap between compassion and pragmatism. Might economics—cold, clear-eyed, and empirical—offer clarity where blind ideology falters?
Sadly, even the dismal science struggles to provide consensus. Does migration nurture growth or choke it? While the question is simple, the answer is maddeningly complex. An influx of highly skilled engineers into Silicon Valley or young workers bolstering Germany’s ageing labour force is plainly a boon. But unmanaged flows into already strained communities can stoke tensions and stretch public services thin. The idea that migration is inherently good—or bad—is a lazy simplification. Reality, as ever, defies tidy narratives.
When Migration Works
The economic case for migration is not hard to make. Highly educated migrants contribute significantly to GDP growth and innovation. One study—Skilled Immigration and the Employment Structures of US Firms by S. P. Kerr (2012)—shows that American firms employing more skilled immigrants enjoy faster growth and greater patenting activity. Migrants do not merely produce ideas; they bring global networks, capital, and know-how, often accelerating technological change.
A 2016 analysis by Anderson for the National Foundation for American Policy found that immigrants were involved in founding over half of US startups valued above $1 billion. For technologically advanced economies, attracting skilled professionals or exceptionally talented youth is a clear win. The downside, however, is felt in the countries they leave behind. Brain drain hampers development in poorer regions already struggling to retain their human capital.
Many migrants attempt to offset this loss by sending money home. Remittances—transfers from migrants to their families—play a vital role in many developing countries. According to the World Bank, such flows to low- and middle-income nations reached $650 billion in 2022. These funds help reduce poverty and stabilise economies. A 2005 study by Adams and Page found that a 10% rise in per capita remittances reduces poverty rates by 3.5% on average. Yet highlighting only these upsides risks distorting the bigger picture.
The Backlash
To view migration solely through rose-tinted glasses is a costly mistake. The burden often is carried disproportionately by the poorer strata of host societies. Georges Marchais, the General Secretary of France’s Communist Party in 1981, understood this intuitively. During his presidential campaign, he called for an end to all migration—legal and illegal—arguing that a country with two million unemployed could not afford to welcome more newcomers.
His intuition finds empirical support today. Harvard’s George J. Borjas has shown that an influx of low-skilled migrants can depress the wages of native workers with similar education levels. In a 2015 paper, he further demonstrated that newer migrant cohorts earn less and integrate more slowly than earlier waves—undermining their economic assimilation.
Nor is there compelling evidence that mass migration significantly boosts GDP. The UK’s experience is instructive. Although large-scale immigration began in the 2000s, national GDP growth has not mirrored the scale of immigration.
Migration As a Tool, Not a Fate
Migration, like trade or technology, is too potent a force to either reject wholesale or embrace uncritically. Common sense—often drowned out by ideology—suggests the truth lies in having a balanced approach. In an interconnected world, building walls is as futile as unthinking openness is naïve. Migration can drive prosperity, but by no means is it a panacea.
Its benefits hinge on circumstances: the newcomers’ skills, how closely they are related both culturally and linguistically to the host country, and the latter’s capacity to integrate them. Low-skilled migrants, if poorly integrated, may face unemployment or undercut local wages. Migration contributes positively only when newcomers work, pay taxes, and join society. If integration fails, social tensions and fiscal burdens can easily outweigh the gains.
Angela Merkel’s 2015 proclamation—Wir schaffen das —therefore was less of a guarantee than it was a challenge. Neither sealed borders nor unfettered openness is the answer. Sensible migration policy must be selective, and geared towards maintaining social cohesion.Only such a policy can deliver prosperity while ensuring stability.
Statement
Migration is neither a blessing nor a curse—it is a policy tool the effects of which depend on how it is wielded. Skilled migrants can drive innovation and growth. Unmanaged migration can however exacerbate inequality and strain public services. Both utopian and alarmist narratives obscure a messy truth: outcomes depend on context. Migration works when it’s selective, integrated, and equitable. The question isn’t whether to open or close borders—but how to ensure a healthy balance which leads to prosperity without endangering social cohesion.