Migrant workers face worse choices than building World Cup stadiums
Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
    • Book Review
    • Brands
    • Earth
    • Explorer
    • Fact Check
    • Family
    • Food
    • Game Reviews
    • Good Practices
    • Habitat
    • Humour
    • In Focus
    • Luxury
    • Mode
    • Panorama
    • Pursuit
    • Wealth
    • Wellbeing
    • Wheels
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • Videos
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • COVID-19
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Sunday
January 29, 2023

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
    • Book Review
    • Brands
    • Earth
    • Explorer
    • Fact Check
    • Family
    • Food
    • Game Reviews
    • Good Practices
    • Habitat
    • Humour
    • In Focus
    • Luxury
    • Mode
    • Panorama
    • Pursuit
    • Wealth
    • Wellbeing
    • Wheels
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • Videos
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • COVID-19
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
  • বাংলা
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2023
Migrant workers face worse choices than building World Cup stadiums

Panorama

Eduardo Porter, Bloomberg
02 December, 2022, 12:40 pm
Last modified: 02 December, 2022, 12:44 pm

Related News

  • Qatar, UAE energy ministers say gas will be needed for long time
  • Lessons from Argentina's World Cup victory
  • Big win for biodiversity overshadowed by World Cup
  • In hangover of World Cup fiesta, Argentina's economic reality bites
  • Argentina president thanks PM Hasina and Bangladeshis

Migrant workers face worse choices than building World Cup stadiums

There is, of course, a legitimate fight to be had to ensure that wages are not stolen and working conditions are humane. And, the tragic reports of deaths of immigrant construction workers in construction sites across Qatar raise legitimate concerns. But these reports rarely consider the alternatives these workers have

Eduardo Porter, Bloomberg
02 December, 2022, 12:40 pm
Last modified: 02 December, 2022, 12:44 pm
Workers walk towards the construction site of the Lusail stadium - one of the seven stadiums built for this year’s FIFA World Cup - in Doha, Qatar in December 2019. Photo: Bloomberg
Workers walk towards the construction site of the Lusail stadium - one of the seven stadiums built for this year’s FIFA World Cup - in Doha, Qatar in December 2019. Photo: Bloomberg

The global financial crisis of 2008 dealt a blow to thousands of Indian labourers. They were set to join hundreds of thousands of compatriots providing the workforce for a construction boom in Dubai. Then the world economy spasmed, the price of oil tanked and international finance dried up. Hundreds of construction projects across the United Arab Emirates stalled. And the workers were left stranded at home, work permits in hand. 

Three years later, survey teams deployed across India to interview thousands of these workers, many of who managed to get jobs in the UAE just before the crisis hit and others who drew the short straw: Hired by the same construction company just a few months later, they never left India and had to settle for a local job. 

Their lives took very different paths: Those who shipped out to the Gulf, researchers found, earned four times as much as those who stayed, a gain on par with the wage gap between a university-educated worker and an illiterate labourer in India.

The World Cup in Qatar has drawn the spotlight onto the plight of its migrant workers – 2.2 million of them in 2020, according to statistics from the United Nations. That is 50% more than a decade earlier when Qatar won the rights to host the tournament. Nearly 80% of them come from  Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines and Sri Lanka. 

Human rights organizations have come down hard on FIFA for not doing more to guarantee the rights of these desperately poor labourers who built the gleaming stadia where the matches are being played. They protest exploitative work, rampant wage theft and high death rates, as well as the lack of unions and the use of coercive contracts that tie migrants to a single employer. 

And yet Qatar's minimum wage ranges from four to eight times that in India. Much like the Indian workers who made it to Dubai before the global financial crisis slammed the door shut, the labourers that got jobs building Doha's stadia are the lucky ones. 

"It is a life-transforming amount of money," said Michael Clemens of the Center for Global Development, who led the research on Indians in the UAE. "It can mean the difference between life and death for a family member who gets sick, between opening a business and not opening a business, between getting off the farm or staying on the farm permanently."

Migrant work in places like Doha, Dubai and beyond is, in fact, the most powerful tool the world knows to reduce poverty. As Glenn Weyl, a research economist at Microsoft who teaches at Yale, noted in a paper for the "Normative Ethics and Welfare Economics" conference at the University of Chicago several years back, migrant work in the Persian Gulf does more to reduce global inequality than the combined welfare states of the rich world.

"If the OECD countries adopted policies similar to Qatar's," Weyl wrote, "such adoption would likely exhaust the supply of poor migrants globally and thus essentially not just eliminate global absolute poverty, but also elevate nearly all individuals outside the global middle class into this group."

The benefits of migrant workers cannot be ignored. A study by economists at the World Bank and Yale University of a lottery in Bangladesh to allocate visas for migrant work in Malaysia's palm oil plantations found that remittances doubled the income of winner households in Bangladesh, compared with loser households. It increased their consumption and their investments in land and housing. They were less indebted and had lower poverty rates.  

Winning the visa lottery delayed migrants' marriages and paused new family formation. In households of married migrants, women's participation in decision-making increased markedly. Winners invested more in their human capital – enrolling in vocational training and language courses.

There is, of course, a legitimate fight to be had to ensure that wages are not stolen and working conditions are humane. 

Acknowledging the potential for abuses, governments in some countries have gotten involved in managing the process. For instance, the Bangladeshi lottery was put in place by the governments of Malaysia and Bangladesh to end recruitment malpractices. The program reduced intermediation fees to $400 per migrant, from the $3,000-$4,000 that private recruiters used to charge. 

New Zealand's Recognized Seasonal Employer scheme, an agricultural guest-work program for nationals of poor South Pacific island countries, raised the household incomes of poor families in Tonga typically by a factor of ten and increased child schooling and Tongans' self-reported standard of living. A study by researchers at the World Bank placed it "among the most effective development policies evaluated to date."

Critics of the conditions migrant workers toil in – who often seem to deem cheap migrant work in rich countries as inherently exploitative and wrong – too often lose sight of a critical question: What is the counterfactual? 

Take, for instance, the tragic reports of deaths of immigrant construction workers in construction sites across Qatar. These reports rarely consider the alternatives these workers have.

Maheshwor Shreshta of the World Bank estimated, for instance, that the two-year mortality of Nepali migrant workers in Malaysia and the Persian Gulf countries was 1.3 per thousand. The mortality rate of average Nepali men with the same age distribution was more than three times higher: 4.7 per thousand.

The critique of the "exploitation of desperate migrants" often assumes that their decision to migrate is based on misinformation and fraud. It may seem like a good idea, but the outcome will inevitably be horrible. One could also make the contrary case, though.

In fact, the flood of outrage and criticism from many developed country NGOs and pundits about the dangers of migrant work might prevent prospective migrants in the world's poorest countries from taking a step that might drastically improve their lives. 

"National and international media have given considerable attention to the numbers of Nepali workers who die abroad, and to the exploitative conditions they work under," Shreshta wrote. "This focus could give potential migrants a misleading impression of mortality rates." 

In one field experiment with Nepali workers, Shreshta found that inexperienced prospective migrants overstated the mortality risk of migration by seven times. And many still wanted to go. If you faced their choices, chances are that you would as well. 

Eduardo Porter/ Columnist
Eduardo Porter/ Columnist

Eduardo Porter is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Latin America, US economic policy and immigration. He is the author of "American Poison: How Racial Hostility Destroyed Our Promise" and "The Price of Everything: Finding Method in the Madness of What Things Cost."


Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by a special syndication arrangement

Features

World Cup / qatar / migrant worker

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • Getting gas to India will be even more costly than laying this pipe to China.Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg
    Russia can't replace the energy market Putin broke
  • Photo: UNB
    AL won't run away, rather will continue developing Bangladesh: PM in Rajshahi
  • Caretaker government most suitable system for credible polls: Fakhrul
    Caretaker government most suitable system for credible polls: Fakhrul

MOST VIEWED

  • Illustration: TBS
    'The silver lining is that the worst is sort of behind us': Hamid Rashid, UN economist
  • Photo: Bloomberg
    BuzzFeed and AI are a match made in fad city
  • Now is the time to focus on FDI composition
    Now is the time to focus on FDI composition
  • Snipe in flight. Photo: Enam Ul Haque
    Baikka Beel: 'A world where snipe work late'
  • Island hopping in Bangladesh?
    Island hopping in Bangladesh?
  • Illustration: TBS
    HC verdict moves the needle on recognising single motherhood

Related News

  • Qatar, UAE energy ministers say gas will be needed for long time
  • Lessons from Argentina's World Cup victory
  • Big win for biodiversity overshadowed by World Cup
  • In hangover of World Cup fiesta, Argentina's economic reality bites
  • Argentina president thanks PM Hasina and Bangladeshis

Features

Nandita Sharmin's journey to give organic skincare a new identity

Nandita Sharmin's journey to give organic skincare a new identity

6h | Mode
Illustration: TBS

'The silver lining is that the worst is sort of behind us': Hamid Rashid, UN economist

9h | Panorama
Photo: Bloomberg

BuzzFeed and AI are a match made in fad city

8h | Panorama
Snipe in flight. Photo: Enam Ul Haque

Baikka Beel: 'A world where snipe work late'

1d | Panorama

More Videos from TBS

Take your football game to the next level at Next Level academy

Take your football game to the next level at Next Level academy

44m | TBS SPORTS
“Investments risky without consistent policy, reliable data”- SK Bashir Uddin

“Investments risky without consistent policy, reliable data”- SK Bashir Uddin

2h | TBS Round Table
What does Shahrukh has in his 770 million dollar property?

What does Shahrukh has in his 770 million dollar property?

22h | TBS Entertainment
15 Reasons Your Entrepreneurial Career Can Fail

15 Reasons Your Entrepreneurial Career Can Fail

21h | TBS Career

Most Read

1
Picture: Collected
Bangladesh

US Embassy condemns recent incidents of visa fraud

2
Illustration: TBS
Banking

16 banks at risk of capital shortfall if top 3 borrowers default

3
Photo: Collected
Splash

Hansal Mehta responds as Twitter user calls him 'shameless' for making Faraaz

4
A frozen Beyond Burger plant-based patty. Photographer: AKIRA for Bloomberg Businessweek
Bloomberg Special

Fake meat was supposed to save the world. It became just another fad

5
Bapex calls candidates for job test 9 years after advert!
Bangladesh

Bapex calls candidates for job test 9 years after advert!

6
Representational Image
Banking

Cash-strapped Islami, Al-Arafah and National turn to Sonali Bank for costly fund

EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2023
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net