https://www.heraldgoa.in/Edit/By-invitation/India%E2%80%99s-Global-Exodus/218478

Here’s one of the most startling facts about our rapidly changing
world: in 2023 alone, the United States caught and expelled 96,917
illegal immigrants from India along its borders with Canada and
Mexico, an astonishing five-fold increase in just three years and up
from basically zero just ten years ago. Now, almost unbelievably, an
estimated 750,000 Indians make up the third-largest population of
undocumented “aliens” in the USA, gaining fast on El Salvador (where
the growth is minimal) and Mexico (from where the numbers are actually
in reverse). Another highly revealing data point: the highest
proportion of these desperate unfortunates are from Gujarat.

Of course, it’s not just America. Earlier this week, UK authorities
reported almost 1200 Indians risked crossing the English Channel in
small boats to seek asylum last year, which is 60% more than in 2022,
and – again – up from literally zero just five years ago. This puts
India amongst the top sources of those risking this dangerous journey,
along with strife-ridden and war-torn countries like Sudan, Syria and
Iraq. By contrast, there were just 103 from Pakistan. Also noteworthy:
Indians supply the largest number of illegal immigrants to the UK via
the more tried-and-tested - not to mention safer - route of
overstaying their visas, as often pointed out by Suella Fernandes
Braverman, the former Home Secretary with ancestral roots in Assagao
and Calangute, whose resolute opposition on this issue is holding up
the long-awaited India-UK Free Trade Agreement.

What is happening in terms of legal migration by India’s best,
brightest and most qualified, who have legitimate means and avenues to
leave the country? If anything, those numbers are even more shocking.
According to the Organization for Co-operation and Development – the
OECD is a club of 38 developed countries – India catapulted high above
China as the biggest source of migrants to their member states
directly after the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2020, the difference was
already 410000 Indians to 230000 Chinese, and the gap has only grown
wider ever since. Migrants from India now outnumber all others in a
bewildering array of countries: Sweden, Canada, Australia and New
Zealand.

What does all this imply for those who remain in India? How should we
understand “the great escape” underway all around us? I found some
valuable context and perspective in an analysis by Ashoka Mody – the
former IMF and World Bank executive who teaches international economic
policy at Princeton – that was first published on the India House
Foundation website, which says its mission is to “to empower the
Indian diaspora in the United States and around the world with
accurate, unbiased, and comprehensive information about the
socioeconomic and political realities of India. We are committed to
fostering a deeper understanding of India's challenges and
opportunities among diaspora members, enabling them to make informed
decisions, engage in meaningful dialogue, and actively participate in
efforts to drive positive change.”

Mody says “over the last five years, 70 million Indians have sought
work in the deeply unproductive segments of Indian agriculture. This
is a cataclysmic regression, as anyone acquainted with the development
process will recognize. A healthy developing economy—particularly one
with shiny digital and physical infrastructure—should experience a
sharp decline in the agricultural workforce and an increase in modern
industrial and service jobs. But the Indian economy generates too few
industrial or urban jobs. Outside of agriculture, the limited
opportunities are in financially (and often physically) precarious
construction and low-end service roles such as street vendors,
housekeepers, security guards, and drivers. Hence, those seeking work
are often driven to an agricultural sector plagued by declining
groundwater and the weather vagaries induced by global warming. The
result is high indebtedness, crop losses, and an increasing number of
farmer suicides.”

He points out that “not surprisingly, the largest number of illegal
migrants originate from agricultural areas in Punjab and Prime
Minister Modi’s home state of Gujarat, famed for its purported Gujarat
model of development. Importantly, the migrants have a reasonable
standard of living by Indian yardsticks. They are from what might
constitute the lower middle class rather than the poorest
group—migration is an expensive business that costs tens of thousands
of dollars. It is noteworthy, therefore, that Indians who have
achieved some measure of success and possess a financial cushion today
are, not unreasonably, worried about the future for themselves and
their children. They prefer to sell their land or other assets, and
borrow from friends and moneylenders to leave while they can.”

The bottom line is extremely alarming. Mody warns that “the Indian
government has long since run out of ideas to create dignified jobs.
Today, the policy discussion relevant to migrants revolves around
reservations for government jobs (because there are too few private
sector jobs) and for higher prices at which the government would
procure farm produce. Both these policies seek new ways to share the
pie rather than grow it. As such, they are unsustainable political
palliatives. The Indian government is unlikely, therefore, to contain
the demographic pressure generating the incentives to migrate.”

Here in Goa, even casual observers can easily perceive all the factors
Mody cites are painfully prevalent except – for now – the advanced
degree of anguish and hopelessness that would compel Goans to flee the
country by any means necessary just like the Gujaratis. That tipping
point may not be very far away, however, as India’s smallest state has
been lagging behind the national growth rate since 2017. We have the
illusion of development, but with very few benefits to even begin to
outweigh its huge environmental, social and cultural costs. In 2021,
the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy warned the employment rate –
““the total number of employed as a percentage of the working age
population” – had already plummeted to 32%. That means out of every
three potential employees, only one has a job. All the data after that
has been steadily worse: last year the RBI ranked Goa the worst state
in rural unemployment, and the Periodic Labour Force Survey of the
Union Ministry of Statistics also has Goa at the very bottom, with
unemployment thrice the national average.

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