The Role of Migration in Caribbean Integration and Development Author(s): Jay R. Mandle Source: Social and Economic Studies, Vol. 60, No. 3/4, Beyond Survival: Turmoil and Turbulence in Small Developing States (September/December 2011), pp. 3-19 Published by: Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies , University of the West Indies Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41635317 Accessed: 20-03-2015 18:04 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. University of the West Indies and Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Social and Economic Studies. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Socialand EconomicStudies60:3 & 4 (2011):3-19 1 ISSN:0037-766 The Role of Migration in Caribbean Integration and Development Jay R. Mandle ABSTRACT thattheemigration Thispaperhypothesizes ofhighlyeducatedCaribbean the slow the common source is pace ofeconomicgrowth people of region's it has achieved.Afterdetailingboth and thelimiteddegreeofintegration and recentdata concerning therecentgrowthand integration experiences, that it how discusses , outflowimpairseconomicdevelopment emigration It and lessens the strengthof effortsto achieveregionalintegration. concludesby notingthata reversalin theflow of human capital has occurredelsewhereand thata similarprocesscould be achievedin the Caribbeanby augmentingthe alreadyexistingpatternof functional presentin theregion.In this, theUniversity oftheWestIndies cooperation that would have a keyroleto play in creatingthekindof environment wouldattractCaribbeanémigréstoreturnhome. Two failures by Caribbean nations require explanation: the relativelyslow pace of economic growth experienced in recent years;and regionalintegration'slimitedsuccess. Bothhave been the subject of separate, extensive discussions. But the possibilitythat they may have a common source namely, the region's huge outflow of people has not been widely considered by regional scholars. This paper presentsand defendsthathypothesisand then goes on to discuss how the regioncould encourage a returnflowof highlyskilled émigrésand in thatway promoteeconomic developmentand integration. Caribbean Economic Growth Over the period 1990 to 2008, the range in growth rates among CARICOM countries was quite wide. Jamaica's and Barbados's Gross Domestic Product(GDP) grew at less than2% per year,while Trinidadand Tobago's grew at more thantwicethatlevel,5.0%, and Belize even more rapidlyat 6.7% (Table 1). WiththeotherCaribbean nations grouped roughly in the 3% to 4% range, the region's population weighted growthratewas 3.0% per annum. This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 4 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES Table1:Growth RatesofRealGDP,CARICOM, OtherRegions, 1990-2007 1990-2008, Country Growth Rate Antigua/Barbuda Barbados Belize Dominica Grenada Guyana Jamaica St.Kitts/Nevis St.Lucia St.Vincent/Grenadines Suriname Trinidad/Tobago 4.2 1.4 6.7 2.0 3.3 2.6 1.8 4.7 3.9 3.9 2.8 5.0 Mean Weighted Population 3.0 EastAsiaandPacific LatinAmerica andCaribbean MiddleEastandNorth Africa SouthAsia Africa Sub-Saharan 8.7 3.4 4.1 6.2 3.6 Source:CARICOMCountries: fromThe Computed WorldBank,WDI Online,http://ddp-ext.worldbank. from TheWorld Bank,World org:Regions: Computed Indicators 2009,Table4.1. Development A growthrateof thismagnitudeextended over a twenty-year period is an accomplishment that should not be dismissed. Nevertheless, as also revealed in Table 1, the region's growth experience compares unfavourablywith the advances occurring elsewhere among developing nations during roughly the same period. Growth rates in Asia were much higher than those of the Caribbean. The Middle East, Sub-SaharanAfricaand the restof the Latin American and Caribbean group of countriesalso grew more rapidlythan did the CARICOM nations. Furthermore,when viewed throughthe prism of the United Nations Human Development Index (HDI), the Caribbean experienceis similarlyless thanfavourable.Table 2 provides both the HDI numericrankingand percentilerankingof Caribbean nations in 1990 and 2007. The latteris provided because it eliminates the impact of the increased number of countriesincluded in the index between those years. Both rankings,however, tell essentially the This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 5 same story.Only three(Antigua and Barbuda, St. Kittsand Nevis and St. Lucia) of the twelve West Indian countriessecured a higher percentilerankingin the later year than in the earlier.In all of the otherstherewas a decline in both measures. Indeed, the percentile declines for Trinidad and Tobago, Suriname and Jamaica were precipitous.Taking all of the countriesof the region into account, the unweighted mean percentiledecline was about 6 percentage points. and Table2:CARICOMCountries HumanDevelopment IndexNumeric Percentile 1990,2007 Ranking, Country Numeric Rank 1990 53 Antigua/Barbuda Barbados 20 Belize 73 52 Dominica 54 Grenada 92 Guyana 63 Jamaica 68 St.Kitts/Nevis St.Lucia 65 66 St.Vincent/Grenadines 56 Suriname 30 Trinidad/Tobago Mean Unweighted 58 Percentile Rank 2007 Change 1990 2007 Change 47 37 93 73 74 114 100 62 69 91 97 64 +6 -17 -20 -21 -20 -22 -37 +6 -4 -25 -41 -34 67 87 54 67 66 42 61 57 60 59 65 81 74 80 49 60 59 37 45 66 62 50 47 65 +7 -7 -5 -7 -7 -5 -16 +9 +2 -9 -18 -16 77 -19 64 58 -6 Human Source:ComputedfromUnitedNationsDevelopment Programme, 1992 2009,TableH. , Table1,Human Development Report Development Report While, therefore,by no means can it be said thatthe region's economy stagnated- much less declined - the factremainsthatits economicmodernizationfellshortofwhat was occurringelsewhere among countriesin the developing world. Caribbean Integration Similarly,the long-termrecord with regard to regional integration in the Caribbean has been at best mediocre,despite the factthatan embryonicpan-regionalistsentimenthas long been presentin the Caribbean.Accordingto Eric D. Duke (2009), "the various effortsto create some form of a 'united West Indies/ be it federation, confederationor closerunion,representone ofthelongestand most This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 6 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES sustained nation-buildingideas in the British Caribbean, even precedingthe 1930s labour uprisings,conventionallythoughtto be the source of Caribbean nationalism." As such, he writes, "federation became a cornerstone of burgeoning West Indian nationalistmovements"(Duke 2009, 220-1,223). Nevertheless Caribbean nationhood has never become a preoccupation of the West Indian people themselves.Gordon K. Lewis captured the problem well when he wrote thatin the region "... therehas always been a sense of common historybut little sense of common destiny" (Lewis, G. 1968, 371). Regionalism's fragilehold on the aspirationsof the Caribbean people is described by Sir ShridathRamphal thus: "the natural state of . . . our Caribwithoutconstanteffort, withoutunrelenting bean is fragmentation; perseverance and discipline, in suppressing instincts born of traditionand environment,it is to our naturalstateof disunitythat we shall return"(Ramphal 2008,4). That stateofdisunitywas all too clearlyrevealed when theWestIndies Federationcollapsed in 1962, only fourshortyears afterits inception. Despite thefailureof theFederation,regionalistsentimentdid not die; instead it became less ambitious. Nation-building was dropped and in its place economic integrationwas promoted.The theory supporting integrationwas firstadvanced by Havelock Brewsterand Clive Y. Thomas in 1967, in the firstof a series of studies published by theInstituteforSocial and Economic Research at the Universityof the West Indies in Jamaica.In The Dynamicsof WestIndian Integration , Brewsterand Thomas not only called for liberalized trade within the region; theyalso argued that "the coordination of commercial legislation and the establishmentof a commonset of incentivelegislationis a sinequa nonof an integrated WestIndies" (Brewsterand Thomas 1967,30). Since the appearance of thatpioneeringwork,many scholars have built upon it. Norman Girvan, in a detailed study that was adopted in principle by the CARICOM heads of governmentin 2007, envisions that a Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME) could act as an "entrepreneurialstate", one that would enable the region to accelerateits rate of economic growth.Girvan advocates that "common Community policies and support measures" be adopted to advance region-wide "driversof economic His anticipationis that with regiongrowthand transformation". wide governmentsupport,these industrieswould "drive economic This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 7 growth in the Community as a whole", and achieve levels of development that would be unobtainable in the absence of integration(Girvan 2007: 13, 18). Regional integrationhas advanced. Its initialimpetus was the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA) agreed to in 1965 by Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados and (then) BritishGuiana. Even more important was the Treaty of Chaguaramas in 1973 that established the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) and the 2000 Revised Treatyof the same name whose stated objectivewas to bring into existencethe CSME. At the subregional level, the impetus towards cohesion resulted in the 1981 establishmentof the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) in which member states share a common currency,and monetary policy is set by an Eastern Caribbean Central Bank. Recentlythe OECS has set out to deepen its integrativefunction.In December 2009 its members initialed the draft of a new treaty which, as described by the organization, will establish an "Economic Union ... as a single financial and economic space" (Organisationof EasternCaribbean States 2009: 5). But over and against these accomplishments,the integration exercise has been frustrating.Writingin 2003, Brewsterreported that though the CSME agreementwas then fourteenyears old, to date "very little had advanced to the stage of implementation" (Brewster 2003: 2). Several years later not much had changed. Girvan calculated thatby 2007, of the 798 "total required actions" needed to implementthe CSME only 55% had been implemented. An even more tellingpatternemerged when Girvan separated the actions required to achieve a "single market" from the more demanding actions associated with constructing a "single economy". Almost two-thirds(64.7%) of the formerhad been accomplished. For the single economy, the percentage was 15.4. However, next to nothing had been done to harmonize laws, to create an enabling environment,or to introducecommon support measures (Girvan2003: 35). Indeed in 2009,economistsat theWorld Bank and the Organization of American States declared that "economic integrationhas stalled in theregion" and thatmore than thirtyyears afterthe 1973 Treatyof Chaguaramas "called for the establishmentof a common market..., that goal is still ratherfar frombeing met...CARICOM has still yet to be a single market economy" (Tsikataet al 2009: 31). This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 8 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES That the CARICOM process has been incompletemeans that integrationitselfhas had little positive impact on the economic growth trajectoryof the region. When Trinidad and Tobago's petroleumexports are excluded, intra-regionaltrade as a share of CARICOM's totalinternationaltradedid not increaseat all between 1979 and 2003, standing at about 6% of total trade throughoutthe period. Similarlythe sectorsthatexperienced the most substantial growthin these years - tourismand natural gas and petroleumwere largely unaffectedby the intra-regionaltariffreductions implemented in these years. As Moreira and Mendoza put it, despite theliberalizingof tradewithinCARICOM "more thanthree decades of regional integrationhave not done much to change a regional division of labour that dates back from colonial times" (Moreira and Mendoza 2007: 18, 22, 25). Mechanisms of Integration The Caribbean is not alone of course in confronting both centripetal and centrifugalforces.Successfulnation-buildingrequires thatthe formerbe strongenough to overcome the latter.In a recentpaper, identifiescriticaldifferencesin thisregard Vaughan Lewis fruitfully between the region's failed Federation (1958-1962) and the accomplishmentsin nation-buildingthat occurred contemporaneously in India and Indonesia. Lewis writes that in the latter countries, there "was the development of non-state political institutionsdevoted well beforeindependence to the articulationof unified political party arrangementsor national liberationfronts, across the geographicterritories ready to assume officeas majority national governments,irrespectiveof considerationsof linguistic, religious or cultural differences and other potential splittest tendencies"(Lewis, V. 2008: 7). At the non-governmentallevel, that is, diverse citizensjoined togetherpoliticallyto influencethe shape of thenationunder construction. Such integrativepolitical activitywas all but totallyabsent in theyearsprecedingtheestablishmentoftheWestIndies Federation. Vaughan Lewis reportsthattherewas "no solidaristpolitical glue binding the national parties to each otherin a federalstructure.So therewas littlebasis forthe progressivearticulationof inter-island politicalsolidarity. . ." (Lewis, V. 2008: 7). As principalhistorianof the FederationJohnMordecai writes,both the West Indies Federal This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 9 Labour Party and the Democratic Labour Partyof the Federation were "contrivedin expediency - both lacking distinctfoundations in doctrine,traditionalthemesand standardsaround which leaders of the territorialparties . . . could rally."Regionalism could hardly have takenrootin a settingin which as Modecai notes in thoseyears "the Eastern Caribbean and Jamaica had no direct steamship communication,did not read each other's newspapers, and at the level of the man on the streetwere hardly aware of each other's existence,except on the cricketfield" (Mordecai 1968: 30, 85-6). Brewstermakes a similarpoint about the politicaleconomy of integrationin his comparison of the Caribbean's experience with thatof Europe. What he points to as the criticaldifferencebetween the two effortsis thatin Europe, unlike in the West Indies, a strong political/economicconstituencywitha vested interestin integration promoted the process. He argues that on the Continent "transnational[economic] interests. . . had much to gain fromthe deepening of integrationand much to lose from its failure to advance." In contrast,he goes on, "in CARICOM thisis not thecase. A transnationalconstituency, and thus a source of pressure forthe CSME, whether of business or civil interests,is almost wholly absent" (Brewster2003: 2). Fundamentalin thisregardwas thevery limited intra-regionaltrade that occurred among West Indian nations,an absence thatstands in contrastto the robustcommerce present among European countries. Commercial interestsin the West Indies are largely indifferentto regional markets; while in Europe the private sector, by virtue of its continentalscope, is keenlyconcernedthataccess and opportunitiesthroughoutEurope be made available to it. In light of the differences between the European and Caribbean commercial concerns with integration,it is fruitfulto reverse the causality present in Brewster'sanalysis. He addresses the problem as one in which an insularbusiness communityin the West Indies did not press for integration.But an even more importantissue might be why the liberalizing of trade that did occur within CARICOM failed to result in the business community'sbreakingout of its insularity.If it had, the region'sprivate sector could well have acted as an agent that promoted deeper integration. What thiscounter-factual exerciseraises is the possibilitythat firmsin the Caribbean lacked the capacity to respond positivelyto This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 10 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES the opportunitiespresentedto themby the limitedintegrationthat theregiondid experience.Seeing theproblemin thatway raises the question of whether there was a common source for both the stuntingof economic growthand the limitingof integration.That common source may have been emigration. Nothing more differentiatesthe countries of the West Indies from nations elsewhere- not even smallness of size - than its verylarge outflow of people. The vast scale of Caribbean emigrationindeed influences virtuallyall elementsof social change in the region. Caribbean Migration Accordingto estimatesprepared by Docquier and Marfouk(2005), the emigrationrates forCARICOM countriesare the highestin the world. The data in the firstcolumn of Table 3 indicatethat37.7% of people born in a CARICOM nation live outside of the region.What this means is that the out-migrationfromthe region is more than threetimesthelevel ofthatfromCentralAmerica,a regiontypically associated withhigh migrationrates. Table3:Emigration RatesforCARICOMCountries, 1965-2000 Rateof RateofSkilled Emigration Emigration Antigua/Barbuda Barbados Belize Dominica Grenada Guyana Jamaica St.Kitts/Nevis St.Lucia St.Vincent/Grenadines Suriname Trinidad/Tobago Mean Unweighted 37.6 32.3 29.0 40.8 53.7 42.1 35.3 49.4 23.1 36.5 47.4 25.2 37.7 66.8 63.5 65.5 64.2 85.1 89.0 85.1 78.5 71.1 84.5 47.9 79.3 73.3 RateofSkilled (16 Emigration yearsormore) 79 76 73 67 62 59 53 48 45 43 NA 17 65 RateofEmigration andRateofSkilledEmigration, 2005, DocquierandMarfouk TableA.1-2;RateofSkilledEmigration Table4, Mishra2006, (16yearsormore), Annex Table1 This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 11 But even more dramaticis the outflowof skilled labour from the Caribbean. The second column of Table 3 reports on the percentageofCaribbean people withcollege degrees who live in the developed world. The data in this column is remarkable.Virtually all college-educatedGuyanese (89%) live abroad and thepercentage is not much lower forGrenada, St. Kittsand Nevis, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.This suggests that,taken as a whole, in excess of 70 percentof highlyeducated West Indian people reside outside of the region. Since some of these well-educatedémigrésmay have received their advanced degrees only afterhaving moved from the West Indies, thisdata may overstatethe Caribbean's loss. The regiondid not investas much in thepeople who were educated elsewhere as it did in the people who received theirtertiarydegree in the West Indies. To take this into account, Prachi Mishra notes that individuals who migratein theirlate teens or laterare less likelyto obtain their schooling in the United States than in their home country. Restrictingthe migration rate to those who left the Caribbean at age 16 or higher thereforerefinesthe measure and adjusts it to bettercapture the loss of educated people fromthe region who received theirtertiaryschooling in the region (Mishra 2006, 17). When this is done, as Column 3 of the table shows, the estimateof regionalloss is reduced. But thefactremainsthatskilled emigrationfromthe region was very high, with the unweighted mean suggesting than more than half of Caribbean people who received tertiaryeducation in the regionnow live in the developed world. The hypothesis that emerges from this discussion is that emigrationis the common source of the region's sluggish growth and incomplete integration.In this perspective the outflow of human capital deprives the Caribbean of precisely the kind of human capital thata moderneconomy requires.But thatsame flow resultsin thefactthata large segmentoftheWestIndian population becomes adults anticipatingthattheywill secure theirprofessional careers elsewhere. As such they do not see themselves as the architectsof a West Indian nation. This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 12 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES Emigrationand Economic Growth Prachi Mishra has computed the "welfare impact of skilled emigration"by estimatingthedirecteconomic costs associated with emigrationand comparing that figure with the positive flow of remittancesthat the exodus generates (Mishra 2006: 6). In her calculations,thecost side involves theincome and earningsthatdid not occur because of emigration,the externalitiesthat were lost because of that exodus, as well as the losses associated with the investmentthat was made in émigrés' education. Her estimate is that in ten of the twelve CARICOM countriesbetween 1980 and 2002, the losses associated with emigration exceeded the dollar value of remittances. In the cases of Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Jamaicaand Trinidad and Tobago the losses were quite high,in excess of 10% of GDP. Only in Grenada and St. Lucia were losses and remittancesapproximatelyequal. withHighSkillEmigration as Table4: LossesandRemittances Associated Percent GDP,1980-2002 Country Loss 13.2 Antigua/Barbuda 18.5 Barbados Belize 6.8 11.5 Dominica 11.0 Grenada 9.5 Guyana 20.4 Jamaica 9.7 St.Kitts/Nevis 3.8 St.Lucia St.Vincent/Grenadines 10.7 Suriname 7.8 16.8 Trinidad/Tobago Mean Unweighted 11.6 Remittances Remittances-Loss 3.0 2.3 4.7 8.4 11.0 1.9 7.4 6.9 4.0 7.2 0.5 0.3 -10.2 -16.2 -2.1 -3.1 0.0 -7.6 -13.0 -2.8 +0.2 -3.5 -7.3 -16.5 4.8 -6.8 Source: Mishra 2006,Table6 But development should be conceived as a broader process thancan be estimatedwith these calculations,valuable as theymay be. What is fundamentalto modern growthis the competenceof a population to work in a complementaryrelationshipwith modern technology.As the World Bank puts it in its 2005 report on the region,"cross countryvariationfs]in competitiveness,productivity This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 13 and income are profoundlylinked with differencesin skills and technology". What this means is that "learning" is central to economic modernization. According to the Bank, "'learning' workers,'learning' firmsand 'learning' regions are winners in the planet-wide, technology-driven, hyper-competitive economy" (World Bank 2005: 144). The logical inference to be drawn is that the region is positioned poorly with regard to such "learning" to the extentthat it loses highlyeducated and skilled personnel.As Andres Solimano writes, "an outflow of entrepreneursand technical talent may depress business creation,innovationand growth"(Solimano 2008: 13). With this the case, there is at least a presumptivecase to be made that the high levels of emigrationfromthe Caribbean have deprived itsbusiness communityof the capabilitiesnecessaryforit to respond aggressively to the market opportunitiescreated by CARICOM. No doubt other factorswere at work in this failureas well. But managerial and technical limitationsare likely to have been importantin the continuinginsularityof the region'sprivate sector, evidenced by the very low level of intra-regionaltrade existingamong memberstates. Emigrationand Integration But it is not only likelythat Caribbean emigrationhas been costly with regard to development.It also seems probable thatit has had a negative impact on integration.Because of emigration,West Indian childrenare broughtup to believe thattheirfutureprospects will be best advanced outside of their country of birth. With aspirationsattachedto emigration,theproportionof people willing to dedicate themselves to the institution-building that Caribbean to not mention integration regional nation-building- requires is driven down to a lower level than would prevail in the absence of such attitudes. Insight into this problem is provided by Rosina Wiltshire's discussion of the factthatforthe people of the West Indies, "longtermemigrationhas resulted in pivotal socializing institutionslike the family transcending national boundaries". In such families Wiltshirewrites,"Childrengrowingup in the donor societyreceive early messages about the host society as representingthe land of opportunity."As a result,she continues,"it is no wonder thatat the This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 14 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES firstpinch of economic crisisin the donor territoriesall roads lead to the alternativehome in the North American paradise with massive legal and illegal outflows." As she puts it, identification with a geographically circumscribed place to which positive characteristicsare attributed"has not necessarily been part of a Caribbean reality"(Wiltshire1992: 177). Migration,in short,shapes childhood socialization in a way that lessens the likelihood that the people of the West Indies will share an unambiguous identificationwith the region. If, as Liah Greenfeld argues, nationalism is central to success in the developmentprocess,the flood of people leaving theWest Indies is the antithesisof what modernizationrequires (Greenfeld2001: 234). The propensityto migrateis of course a response to market opportunities.But thatresponse has also been deeply internalized and accepted as the norm by the West Indian people. That is the likely reason for the governmentsof the region having adopted what a leading Caribbean migrationscholar has described as a "laissez-faireapproach to migration".And it is forthe same reason that government officials frequentlyare quoted in support of emigration,as in thecase ofJamaica'sMinisterof Education in 2001, who said thathe "was not opposed to the recruitment of hundreds of local teachersforposts in New York schools", at least partially because many of them were going to teach "our own childrenof Caribbean origin" (Thomas-Hope 2002: 24, 21). Reversing Migration It would be desirable to reverseor at least reduce the emigration rate in order to promote Caribbean development and integration. But public supportwould not countenancerestricting thatoutflow. Few office-seekersin the region would be willing to put their political careers at risk by opposing the freedomto move abroad without domestic constraints.Even more important,as ThomasHope emphasizes, "there is no need in small countriesto regard non-migrationas being necessarily beneficial to the country.In small countriesas thoseoftheCaribbean,thereis much to be gained by both individual and communityas a whole fromthe mobility, especially students or persons early in their professional lives." What developmentpolicy needs to do, she writes,is "focus upon This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 15 the propensityof migrantsto return"and place emphasis on "the creation of the opportunitiesand the environmentconducive to retainingthemaftertheyreturn"(Thomas-Hope 2002: 26). This veryissue - how to gain access to and utilize the skillsof émigrés to promote development in theircountriesof origin has been the subjectof recentdiscussion among developmentanalysts. Solimano writes that in contrastto past thinkingthat considered migrationas a one-way flow of people frompoor to richcountries, in recentyears "we thinkmore in termsof brain circulation,a twoway (or multipledirectional)movementof talentedindividuals . . . What is now highlightedis the way that therecan be a 'beneficial brain drain'" (Solimano 2008: 2). This literaturehas only recently startedto appear and as yetthereis not enough empiricalevidence to support strong policy recommendationsconcerning the promotion of a reverseflow of human capital. Obviously it is difficult to overcome the attractionof advanced living conditionsas well as the entrepreneurialand research opportunities present in the developed world. Nevertheless,theidea thatmigrationis no longer viewed as necessarily a one-way flow represents a change in perspective that potentially could be of great value to the Caribbean. The implicitmodel is based on the experiences of high-tech employees born in countriessuch as Taiwan (China), Chile, China, India or Israel,many of whom worked in theUnited Statesor other OECD [OrganisationforEconomicCo-operationand Development] countries,but at some point returnedto their countriesof birth. There theyestablishednew firmsand/orprovided technicaladvice forlocal corporations.In these ways, as Danny M. Leipziger writes, members of the diaspora "can act as bridges between foreign technologyand marketsand local entrepreneurs,and complement and strengthenlocal market-basedinstitutions".But success in this regard involves more than just the private sector. It requires supportive governmentpolicies and institutionsin the recipient nation. As Leipziger summarizes the situation, "strong local institutionsare crucial forutilizingdiaspora resources effectively" (Leipziger 2008: 3, 5). Success in encouraging a return flow of Caribbean migrantswill not only stimulateeconomicgrowth;itwill also advance the cause of integration. Attractingoverseas Caribbean professionalsto returnhome is almostcertainlybeyond the capacityof any one WestIndian nation. This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 16 SOCIALANDECONOMICSTUDIES Doing so will require "functionalcooperation" among the nations of the region.It is in this dimension of integration- the sharingof servicesand the undertakingof joint activitiesby the governments of the region - that substantial achievementshave already been recorded,holding out the promise of more such advances in the have secured gains withregardto healthcare, future.Shared efforts disaster education, security, management,research and development, and sports and youth development. And though Clive Thomas argues that the institutionalframeworkconcerningsuch activities "still remains far from satisfactory",he nonetheless observes thatthatframeworkis "more developed than otherareas of regional integration"(Thomas 2008: 261). AttractingCaribbean people resident in the diaspora to return to the region would involve building on these experiencesand expanding the realm of functionalcooperation. The pioneer in functionalcooperation- the Universityof the West Indies (UWI) - could be the locus of such an effort. Researchers on the subject of return migration have learned, according to Mario Cervantes and Dominique Guellec, that "developing centersofexcellenceforscientificresearchand framing the conditionsforinnovationand high tech entrepreneurshipcan make a countryattractiveto highlyskilled workers."The authors add that"the task is not easy and it takes time. . . ." But theygo on to reportthat China has been particularlysuccessfulin this effort and has done so in part by having "launched a projectto develop 100 universitiesinto world-class institutionsthatnot only provide higher education training,but also academic employment and researchopportunities"(Cervantesand Guellec 2002). The scale involved in the Chinese experience of course is vastly differentthan what would have to occur in the Caribbean. But the principleremainsthe same. IfUWI were self-consciouslyto become a hub of technologically sophisticated research and development, it likely could provide a sufficientlydesirable environmentto attracthighlytrainedCaribbean people to returnto the region in roles that might combine entrepreneurshipand academic employment. To a limited extentthis already is being undertaken at the University.However, such an innovativestrategywould require a substantialincrease in the resourcesthatare made available to the school. It could onlybe accomplishedifattractingreturneesbecame This content downloaded from 134.74.122.250 on Fri, 20 Mar 2015 18:04:27 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The Role of MigrationinCaribbean Integration 17 an explicit goal, and fund-raising efforts were targeted to accomplish that aim. This would involve not only the kind of privatesectorfund-raisingthatis increasinglybeing undertakenby UWI. Collectively the region's governmentswould have to be supportiveof heightenedeffortsby,forexample,joiningtogetherin diplomatic effortsto secure additional resources from donor agencies and governments.There is no certaintythatsuch funding would be adequately made available. But the promiseof success in such an endeavor would be greaterthan the region'sprotractedbut treatment ultimatelyfutileeffortsto protectspecial and differential forits sugar and bananas. Otheraspects of functionalintegrationcould complementthis effort.Cooperation to tackle the veryhigh level of crimethatexists in the region, to improve the quality of primaryand secondary education, and to expand available health services all should be understood as components of a strategythat,by improving the quality of life available to returningmigrantsand their families, could act to reduce the region'sheavy loss of skilled and educated labour. In thisway regional integrationcould be deepened and at the same time the prospects for Caribbean economic modernization enhanced. The region's long-standingculture of migrationmight therebybe turnedto its advantage. REFERENCES Brewster,Havelock. 2003. "Mature Regionalismand the Rose Hall Deliveredat theCARICOM Declarationon RegionalGovernance/' and Integrated on 30thAnniversary Conference RegionalGovernance the West Mona. of Indies, Development, University Y. Thomas. 1967. 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