A growing number of women are crossing borders in their autonomous capacity and looking for jobs, making 37 per cent of more than 150 million migrant workers in the world, a new study by the International Labour Organisation said today.
The 150.3 million migrant workers account for 72.7 per cent of the 232 million migrants globally. Of them, 8.8 million women are among the 11.5 million migrant domestic workers. Among migrant workers, 83.7 million (55 per cent) are men and 55.7 million (37 per cent) women, International Labour Organisation (ILO) Global Estimates on Migrant Workers showed.
Though labour migration is a phenomenon affecting all regions of the world, an overwhelmingly 74.7 per cent or 112.3 million people are in high income countries, 17.5 million in upper-middle income countries, 16.9 million or 11.33 per cent in lower-middle income countries including India.
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India received 47.1 per cent of its remittances in 2012 from Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. India and China are the largest recipients of officially recorded remittances in the world and together receive more remittances than the next six countries combined. India received 70 billion in the form of remittances in 2013.
This is the first time that such kind of data, based on estimates from 2013, has been put on a global and regional basis with a new methodology that has been developed.
"These are data that certainly underestimate the actually numbers involved. The other major finding is the feminisation of migration. You have growing numbers of women who are crossing borders in their autonomous capacity and looking for jobs," Director of the ILO Conditions of Work and Equality Department Manuela Tomei said.
Migrants, especially migrant women, have higher labour force participation rates than non-migrants. There are 67.1 million domestic workers in the world of whom 11.5 million are international migrants, according to the ILO estimates.
In 2013, almost every sixth domestic worker in the world
was an international migrant. About 73.4 per cent of all domestic workers are women of which South Eastern Asia and Pacific hold the largest share (24 per cent) followed by Northern, Southern and Western Europe (22.2 per cent) followed by Arab states (19.0 per cent).
"That's a big concentration and it also sends up flags as to where we need to do more in terms of protection in policy," Mitchell Leighton, chief of the Labour Migration branch at ILO, said.
The Arab states, however, hold 50.8 per cent of all male migrant worker.
"These (domestic workers and migrant domestic workers) are a group of workers that are particularly exposed and vulnerable to labour exploitation and to severe abuses. This is very much due to the fact, also, (that) in many countries domestic work is not regarded as work," Tomei added.
"These are invisible workers so the first thing to do in order to reduce vulnerability to exploitation is indeed recognising that these are workers... It is also very much connected to raising awareness not only about what discriminatory behaviour is and how it manifests itself but also valuing their work," Tomei told