A tin of beans has more freedom to travel the world than a person does.
Over the last 200 years there has been a dramatic reduction in the rules
that restrict things travelling across borders. The average tariff on goods moving between countries is now about two per cent.
While
things are increasingly free to move around the world, the opposite is
true for people. Almost all developed countries restrict immigration to
some extent. And while
three quarters of UN member states have signed up to the rules that
prevent people trafficking and smuggling, less than a quarter have
endorsed global rules to protect migrants’ rights. The priority is to keep people out, not to welcome them in.
What a change from a hundred years ago. Then, more than one million people emigrated quite legally from Europe to America every year in the decade after 1900.
These were people exercising their freedoms to realise their ambitions
of a better life for themselves and their families. A liberal
capitalists’ dream, you might think. But it seems not. Throughout the
twentieth century, barriers have gone up, and people’s choices have been
restricted around the world.
Trade barriers and
restrictions never stopped people trading – they just led to smuggling,
to crime and even to death. And rules on migration do not stop people
moving. Barriers go up, but migration keeps on rising – the number of
international migrants has risen by nearly 50% since 1990.
Just as with trade, the combination leads inexorably to
people-smuggling, to crime, and to the daily massacres in the
Mediterranean that have claimed nearly 2,000 lives this year.
The trend is unstoppable, the evidence is clear,
and it all adds up to the strongest of cases for reducing restrictions
on people’s freedom to migrate. But political pressure for the
liberalisation of movement is almost absent. Instead, political leaders
are encouraged to respond to migrant deaths with more restrictions – rather than taking the humane, realistic and economically sound approach of looking at how the rules can be liberalised.
Who will speak up for people? It
won’t be political parties, at least not in the UK – the recent
election here saw a near-universal consensus that immigration is
something to be stopped. It won’t be NGOs – the traditional voices for
the voiceless in other places. While there have been some campaigns
about the humanitarian response to migrant death, development
organisations have been almost totally silent on how to actually make
migration fairer. It won’t be trade unions, trapped in the false logic
that one person more coming in to the country is one job less for their
members – a view that has been disproved again and again but, like a
zombie, will not die. No one, it seems, will speak up for the millions
who move.
There is something shameful in our acceptance of
freedoms for things, when we are not prepared to grant that freedom to
our fellow human beings. It’s better, it seems, to be an inanimate
object than a living breathing person if you want to travel around the
world.
Among the first lobbyists for trade liberalisation were
the Corn Law reformers Cobden and Bright. It is almost unbelievable now
that a legitimate political stance two hundred years ago was that trade
should be restricted even while people starved through lack of food. It
took brave people to challenge that view, people whom history has proved
entirely correct. In two hundred years’ time we may also look back with
the same incredulity at the idea that free movement of people is
anything other than a global good, for those who move and those who
stay.
Migration will not and cannot and should not be stopped.
It’s good for countries, and it’s good for the millions of people who
vote with their feet however many restrictions are put in their way. Who
will be brave enough to lead the last liberalisation of capitalism and
give to people the same freedoms as cars, as clothes, and as computers?
from here
Unfortunately I am unable to log in to any of the sites which will display comments, so, for that reason, I urge readers sympathetic to the socialist cause to go to the link and recommend others to peruse both this blog (with much support for the immigrants case) and the World Socialist Party/SPGB website to see that there is a movement out there which supports the rejection of all borders.
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