Moving Millions: How Coyote Capitalism Fuels Global Immigration
- ISBN13: 9780470423349
- Condition: New
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On the same day that reporter Jeffrey Kaye visited the Tondo hospital in northwest Manila, members of an employees association wearing hospital uniforms rallied in the outside courtyard demanding pay raises. The nurses at the hospital took home about 1 a month, while in the United States, nurses earn, on average, more than fifteen times that rate of pay. No wonder so many of them leave the Philippines.
Between 2000 and 2007, nearly 78,000 qualified nurses left the Philippines to work abroad, but there’s more to it than the pull of better wages: each year the Philippine president hands out Bagong Bayani (“modern-day heroes”) awards to the country’s “outstanding and exemplary” migrant workers. Migrant labor accounts for the Philippines’ second largest source of export revenue—after electronics—and they ship out nurses like another country might export textiles. In 2008, the Philippines was one of the top ranking destination countries for remittances, alongside India ( billion), China (.5 billion), and Mexico (.2 billion).
Nurses in the Philippines, farmers in Senegal, Dominican factory workers in rural Pennsylvania, even Indian software engineers working in California—all are pieces of a larger system Kaye calls “coyote capitalism.”
Coyote capitalism is the idea—practiced by many businesses and governments—that people, like other natural resources, are supplies to be shifted around to meet demand. Workers are pushed out, pulled in, and put on the line without consideration of the consequences for economies, communities, or individuals.
With a fresh take on a controversial topic, Moving Millions:
- Knocks down myth after myth about why immigrants come to America and what role they play in the economy
- Challenges the view that immigrants themselves motivate immigration, rather than the policies of businesses and governments in both rich and poor nations
- Finds surprising connections between globalization, economic growth and the convoluted immigration debates taking place in America and other industrialized countries
- Jeffrey Kaye is a freelance journalist and special correspondent for the PBS NewsHour for whom he has reported since 1984, covering immigration, housing, health care, urban politics, and other issues
What does it all add up to? America’s approach to importing workers looks from the outside like a patchwork of unnecessary laws and regulations, but the machinery of immigration is actually part of a larger, global system that satisfies the needs of businesses and governments, often at the expense of workers in every nation.
Drawing on Jeffrey Kaye’s travels to places including Mexico, the U.K., the United Arab Emirates, the Philippines, Poland, and Senegal, this book, a healthy alternative to the obsession with migrants’ legal status, exposes the dark side of globalization and the complicity of businesses and governments to benefit from the migration of millions of workers.
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Review by R. C. Silveira for Moving Millions: How Coyote Capitalism Fuels Global Immigration
Rating:
In his book “Moving Millions”, Jeffrey Kaye has framed the entire immigration debate in a whole new light, certainly far different from what we hear from governmental officials and the media today. I couldn’t help but flash back to my childhood, growing up on a farm in Salinas Valley, California, in the 1950′s & 1960′s as my father continued to struggle as a small farmer. I recalled his Filipino foremen and the harvest crews of Mexican laborers, which were part of the Bracero program. At the time I was too young to think, let alone to care much, about where these laborers were coming from, and at that time there was little or no debate or discussion about them, and certainly not much about immigration, whether legal or not. To me, they were the necessary labor force my dad hired to help out on the farm, and to bring the crops in on time. It certainly never crossed my mind as a young boy to wonder about their families or their homes in foreign countries, but this book brought those questions into focus, albeit some 50 years later. It also made me think about my grandparents who, as teenagers, immigrated with their parents through Ellis Island from the Azores Islands of Portugal, looking for a better life here in America. While their entry into the country was legal, I remember as a teenager that they encouraged many relatives from their island home country to come to California for a year or two, the purpose being to earn, with back-breaking field labor, more money than they could have ever imagined in their poor island home in Portugal. They would then return home and buy land there with their newly-made “fortune” to begin their own farms. I worked side-by-side with some of these distant relatives one summer, chopping weeds in endless rows of field crops, but they spoke no English, I spoke no Portuguese, and I failed to ever have any substantial conversations with them about what my grandparents longingly referred to as the “old country”, a failure I regret to this day. Jeffrey Kayes’ book speaks eloquently of this “circular migration” pattern, and I can see it in my own family history.
If it were within my power, I would mandate this book be issued as required reading to all border-patrol agents, self-appointed minute-men, and to every politician, at state and national levels, to serve as a well-balanced and carefully-researched base of reference from which to frame todays’ immigration policy. At the very least, I would wish that everyone who has ever complained about “illegal immigrants” could read the last paragraph of the book, which is a wonderful distillation of the essance of the migration issues facing this country and the world at large.