Migration and Integration Policy Index – 2020

Actually, if you suddenly want to approach emigration in a more meaningful way (and there is an opinion that after the pandemic is over, many people will think about migration), here is the latest Migration and Integration Policy Quality Index.
And by the way, it’s not obvious in general – the best place to integrate a migrant in the European Union is Portugal. And then there are Ireland, Finland, Sweden, and Luxembourg, not at all the major European economies, which have long been in the “work – yes, migration – would not like” category.
The worst countries in terms of migration policy, besides China, India, and Indonesia, which simply do not need migration, are Croatia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Russia. In the first three cases, this is a consequence of mechanically driven policies on the part of the EU, which work at the level of “equality on paper”.
Russia is perhaps the brightest and largest example of a migration-dependent country with an archaic migration policy that is not a “policy” at all, but a set of corruptly motivated instructions.
Actually, if you suddenly want to approach emigration in a more meaningful way (and there is an opinion that after the pandemic is over, many people will approach migration), here is the latest Migration and Integration Policy Quality Index.
And by the way, it’s not obvious – the best place to integrate a migrant in the European Union is Portugal. And then there are Ireland, Finland, Sweden, and Luxembourg, not at all the major European economies, which have long been in the “work – yes, migration – would not like” category.
The worst countries in terms of migration policy, besides China, India, and Indonesia, which simply do not need migration, are Croatia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Russia.
In the first three cases, this is a consequence of mechanically driven policies on the part of the EU, which work at the level of “equality on paper. Russia is perhaps the brightest and largest example of a migration-dependent country with an archaic migration policy that is not a policy at all, but a set of corruptly motivated instructions.
Most of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe have the same problem – “equality on paper,” which is caused, among other things, by the full amount of fears and the implicit conservatism of the ruling elites, multiplied by slow economic development.

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