Title: The 4th CEENOM Meeting,
1- The 4th CEENOM Meeting,
- October 27-29,
- Suzdal, Russia
2- Illegal/Irregular Immigrants and Their Economic
Activities in the Czech Republic (Preliminary
Results of a Qualitative Research) - Dušan Drbohlav
- Zdenek Cermák
- Dagmar Dzúrová
- Eva Janská
- Dita Cermáková
- Lenka Lachmanová
- Department of Social Geography and Regional
Development, Faculty of Science, - Charles University in Prague
- drbohlav_at_natur.cuni.cz
3RESEARCH PROJECT International Migration and
Migrants Illegal/Irregular Activities The Czech
Republic in a Broader European Context
- Dušan Drbohlav
- (leader of the team)
- Zdenek Cermák
- Dagmar Dzúrová
- Eva Janská
- Dita Cermáková
- Lenka Lachmanová
4Main goals of the project
- To map migrants illegal/irregular/quasi-legal
activities - To penetrate their migration motives
- To follow their transit to and living conditions
in the new country - To analyse their relationship to their mother
country - To find out what their future behavioural
stategies are - To analyse changes after the enlargement of the
EU - To ascertain migrants impact upon society and
vice versa to measure how effective - in
migration field - regulatory measures are - To compare results among the Czech Republic,
Austria and Humgary - Project sponsored by the Ministry of Labour and
Social Affairs Project - Program Modern Society and Its Changes No.
1J/PR/03327 -
- more information www.geography.cz/illegal.htm
5Testing theories and concepts
- Push-pull
- Neoclassical economic theory
- Dual labour market theory
- Network theory
- Institutional theory
- Transnationalism
6Time schedule 2005, methods
- 1) Expert interview (N30)
- Delphi survey (N30)
- Questionnaire survey
- Illegal/irregular migrants from (N100)
- A) Post-Soviet area (European part),
- B) Vietnam, China,
- C) the USA, Canada
- Both quantitative and qualitative approaches
7What is your current job, specialization and
position? What role do you and your institution
play in relation to illegal/irregular migration
and related issues?
- Altogether 22 interviewees
-
- WORK for
- 7 NOGs
- 7 GOs
- 6 academic sphere
- 2 ethnic associations
- SPECIALIZATION
- mostly humanities - law and sociology
- Illegal/irregular migrants are often not a direct
target group (except for respondents from IOM)
mainly legal counselling, humanitarian aid - Some respondents cover the whole issue of
illegal/irregular migration, some only some
segments (e.g. grey economy, businessman,
individual ethnic groups Ukrainians,
Vietnamese)
8How would you define illegal or quasi-legal
migrants economic activities in the CR while
taking into account a difference employees
vis-a-vis small businessman?
- It has to do with - breaking a law, legislative
rules - Different views
- a) Quasi-legal does not exist either legal or
illegal - b) quasi-legal it is legal but not in harmony
with what legislators thought - c) Irregular better term than illegal more
general illegal migrants have no rights to stay
in the country - d) Illegal work employees responsibility
versus illegal employment employers
responsibility - e) illegal migration it is not only breaking
rules concerning a stay and work but it is also
tied to organized mafia-like structures. - Reality in the CR it is often difficult to
distinguish whether you act in line with a law or
against it!
9What are main types and forms of migrants
illegal/irregular economic activities in the CR?
- 1) Work without residence and work permits and
without any work contract (probably the most
typical construction, auxiliary work, cleaning
etc. ) - 2) With a residence permit and a trade license
however, hidden employment they work as
typical employees - 3) They come under the umbrella of a tourist
visa, they work and they often stay after they
visa have expired - 4) Asylum seekers who start working immediately
after their asylum application has been submitted
- 5) Not fullfiling the main purpose for a stay,
e.g. while proclaiming family reunification or
study, they occasionally work (services,
translations etc.) - 6) Tourists who come within a free visa regime
(some western migrants) and work also often for a
long-term period
10What are main types and forms of migrants
illegal/irregular economic activities in the CR?
- Via establishing public trading and limited
liability companies, foreign business persons
legally operate and function only as employees. - Pretending services (making use of the EU rules)
an entrepreneur who is registered in one of the
member states has a right to provide services in
other MS (e.g. misused by Poles in the CR). - Different time horizons
- 1) Those who want to stay for ever
- 2) Those who stay for a long time while keeping
intensive ties with their country of origin - 3) Those who stay for a short time (1-2 months)
- Other typical features
- a) client system,
- b) flexibility (shifts among economic
sectors/branches, occupations and regions) -
11Basic personal characteristics of
illegal/irregular migrants in the CR
- Country of origin countries of the former Soviet
Union Ukraine, Moldova, Belorussia, Bulgaria,
Albania, countries of the former Yugoslavia,
Poland, Afghanistan, Vietnam China, the USA - Specialization (niche) Ukrainians auxiliary
works in construction, Vietnamese retail
(cheap goods), Western immigrants services
(translations, leading various courses etc.) - Sex Males slightly dominate over females
- Education Ukraine mostly secondary education,
however, it does not correspond to what is a
standard in Western and Central European
countries - Family status all possible categories involved,
if children than left at home
12How do migrants illegal/irregular economic
activities in the CR differ from those performed
by citizens of the country?
- Sanctions for migrants are stricter, much more
hit a given person, no base in a host country - Migrants are discriminated (work, salaries,
working conditions, relations ) activities are
well organized - clients/agencies takeover some
of the responsibilities - Often mafia-like structures and organized crime
involved
13In which sectors/branches, occupations, companies
and regions do illegal/irregular migrants mostly
operate?
- Branches - construction, agriculture and
forestry, services (including domestic ones) - Occupations bricklayers, chambermaids,
auxilliary works, manual/low skilled activities - All types of companies involved from small
(direct contact) to big ones (via
(subcontracting) - Big cities and western part of the country
14What are the most important positive aspects
related to migrants illegal/irregular economic
activities?
- The CR needs such work fullfiling gaps on the
Czech labour market (Czechs are not interested
3D, some professions are missing) - They importantly contribute to the Czech welfare
(various impacts ) - Due to migrants flexibility the ecomomy as such
is more efficient - Entrepreneurs especially gain they save money
pay low wages, do not pay taxes and insurance - Migrants good quality (?) but mainly not long
lasting work, cheap laborforce - Migrants put no burden on the social system
- Society is enriched through a communication with
different cultures
15What are the most important negative aspects
related to migrants illegal/irregular economic
activities?
- Democracy is undermined
- Hidden criminal (mafia-like) structures are being
created - Corruption is flourishing (police, state
officials, customs officers) - Bad image put on all migrants (including legal
ones) - Possible impacts upon international relations (CR
vis-a-vis Ukraine) - They do not pay taxes (except VAT) and
custom-duty (huge import) - It contributes to separation/segregation trends
(Vietnamese) - They harm Czech entrepreneurs who stick to given
laws/rules - Czechs lose some of the working opportunities
- In the case of a personal accident or casualty
huge expenses on the side of the CR - Loss of migrants potential human capital
-
16What are the most important negative aspects
related to migrants illegal/irregular economic
activities?
- Concerning migrants
- No legal protection
- Discrimination
- No access to social and health insurences
- Small possibility to make use of their own human
capital - Problems for legal migrants since employers got
used to employ illegal/irregular migrants
17How were migrants illegal/irregular economic
activities seen during the last 15 years?
- 1990-1997 - Very liberal policy without installed
controling mechanisms doors opened - The state knew about the problem but more or less
ignored the issue at that time there were many
other problems on the agenda - New escalation of the issue related to more
restrictive new migratory legislation in
1999/2000 - The state combats illegal migration (basic policy
principles 2003, Interministerial Body, Action
Plan 2004) -
- Now - some say it is better due to an impact of
the EU - more restrictions (controls), but also
somewhere more liberal regime - Some say it is worse nobody cares about
that . The issue is not very much discussed and
publicized, some exceptions 2004-2005
18How is paying attention to migrants
illegal/irregular economic activities related to
a more general development?
- Migrants change their behavioral strategies in
relation to changing legislation - More restrictive approaches (and related huge
administration/paperwork) lead to increasing
illegal/irregular activities - When the economy is booming (demand for a
laborforce is growing) - migrants
illegal/irregular economic activities are more
tolerated, when the economy is stagnating
migrantsscapegoats .. not yet in the CR! - Brutal criminality tied to migrants, to large
extent, disappeared - Czechs do not accept populists in this field too
much
19Are there any new forms/features regarding
migrants illegal/irregular economic activities
after the enlargement of the EU on May 1,2004?
- System of migrants illegal/irregular economic
activities imported to the EU (flexible models)
e.g a client system - On the other hand, the EU legislation has an
impact upon the national one mandatory
harmonization - Pretended providing services (based on the EU
regulation) - The Dublin II Agreement smaller room for
migrants to operate in, pull for
illegal/irregular status of migrants in CEEc - Probably more intensively influenced by joining
the Schengen Agreement (in a fall 2007?)
20How many illegal/irregular migrants do stay and
work in the CR? Has that number changed over the
last five years? What sources are your
assessments based on?
- It was a very difficult question one half of
the respondents did not dare to answer - Estimates varies between 40,000 and 200,000
- Slightly more respondents voted for increasing
numbers over time (7) as compared to decreasing
(5), 6 expressed that the numbers are stabilized - Changes in forms over time from
illegal/irregular to quasi-legal, from employment
to running business - Assessments based on respondents own experience,
literature, statistics/data (e.g. Alien and
Border Police), Ukrainian Embassy in the CR
21What is migrants health care like? How do they
solve health problems in the CR
- It depends on clients but also on an individual
ethnic group - Vietnamese are not insured, when having problems
they go to see his/her ethnic doctor - After meeting with an accident, one can
legalize his/her treatment via paying a
commercial insurance - After meeting with an accident, they immediately
leave the country - After meeting with an accident (and not being
insured), a client pays for his employee in
cash in a hospital - After meeting with an accident (not being insured
and not having a responsible client) a migrant
ends up in asylum or detention centres where some
basic health care service is at persons disposal
22What is migrants housing/accommodation like?
- Conditions depends on how much one wants to
invest in it also on branches of the economy
and a type of work (e.g. construction versus
forestry versus homeworks) and on an ethnic group
- Better conditions than 10 years ago -
- more pieces of information
- - However, also very poor conditions do exist
construction - dorms, huge concentrations of
people, (20 migrants per 20m2, cellars/underground
spaces) bad hygienic conditions, a periphery of
big cities or some central parts of cities
(Prague) - Vietnamese often lives with their compatriots
family members or friends
23What forms of payments for migrants do exist?
- Wages are always lower as compared to Czech
employees since no taxes are paid - Payments mosty in cash (in USD) based on
agreement between a client and a migrant, no
signed contracts - Sometime advance payments are paid but a base
amount will never arrive - Unqualified/low skilled/manual work about 120-
80 Czech crowns per hour go to a client, in fact
a worker has got about 40 Czech crowns (in
addition, a migrant has to often pay for his/her
accommodation) sometimes no money are paid,
sometimes money are stolen from him/her (on a
border) - Often a minimal wage plus additional money are
paid
24For how long do migrants stay and work in the CR?
- Various forms applied individual ethnic groups
stick to different modes - - Slovaks circulate monthly (go home for
social subsidies payments) - - Ukrainians a short-term circulatory
movements (several months, problems when a
tourist visa expires (after 90 days) - - Vietnamese rather a long-term stay (3 and
more years) getting into debts - By branches
- Construction - short-term and mid-term stays
- Industry (automobile, food) - long-term stays
25What sort of discrimination are illegal/irregular
migrants in the CR exposed to?
- Many different forms of discrimination in terms
of - - wages (employers, mediators/clients)
- - work load and working conditions (safety,
hygienic conditions, housing conditions) - - psychological blackmailing
- - blackmailers Police, officers, compatriots,
- mafia-like structures
- - sexual exploitation women
- - antipathy to foreigners within the majority
population - No appeal possible!
26Conclusions
- The existing information on illegal/irregular
migrants and their activities in the CR is far
from complete - The phenomenon of migrants illegal/irregular
economic activities is an important issue with
many implications for the whole society - To large extent, the illegal/irregular migrants
behave in the CR like in many other developed
immigration countries - The phenomenon has shifted in the CR over time
from more brutal/drastic to more decent forms
i.e. from illegal to quasi-legal