How to become a migration superpower Migration has the potential to shake the geopolitical balance of powers, writes Mark Leonard, as the example of Turkey illustrates © Plainpicture How to become a migration superpower Migration has the potential to shake the geopolitical balance of powers, writes Mark Leonard, as the example of Turkey illustrates Related articles Related articles A country in flux: Germany’s refugee challenge How many? How long? And how? Germany’s refugee crisis is triggering a flurry of questions, but it is part of a much larger migration wave in the future Migrant flows stronger than ever An all-time high of 244 million migrants live outside their country of birth, according to the United Nations. Yet despite these inflows, many aging countries are shrinking, writes Barry Mirkin Living in a world of 11 billion Barry Mirkin, formerly with the UN Population Division, examines the latest population projections to see what the world will be like in 2100 Where have all my colleagues gone? An aging workforce in Germany, Japan, the US and UK is likely to decrease wealth by up to 15%
A country in flux: Germany’s refugee challenge How many? How long? And how? Germany’s refugee crisis is triggering a flurry of questions, but it is part of a much larger migration wave in the future
Migrant flows stronger than ever An all-time high of 244 million migrants live outside their country of birth, according to the United Nations. Yet despite these inflows, many aging countries are shrinking, writes Barry Mirkin
Living in a world of 11 billion Barry Mirkin, formerly with the UN Population Division, examines the latest population projections to see what the world will be like in 2100
Where have all my colleagues gone? An aging workforce in Germany, Japan, the US and UK is likely to decrease wealth by up to 15%