Egypt is considered one of the top emigrating countries, ranking number 12 in the
world in terms of the number of emigrants as shown in Table 1.Table 1: Top Emigration
4
Labour migration for decent work, economic growth and development in Egypt
The number of Egyptian emigrants reached 2,399,251 in 2005, representing around
3.2 per cent of the Egyptian population (World Bank, 2006).
1
The main receiving countries
have been Arab (mainly Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Oman) and
some of the EU countries (Italy, UK, Germany, Greece, and the Netherlands), besides the
US, Canada and Australia. There is a high concentration of Egyptian migrants in the EU
that absorbs around 5 per cent of the total of Egyptians living abroad. Within the EU,
Egyptian migrants are concentrated in Italy (40 per cent), and the UK (23 per cent),
followed by Germany (10 per cent) and the Netherlands (10 per cent) (European
Investment Bank, 2006).
Regarding the classification of migration into temporary and permanent, emigration
flows out of Egypt have always been classified as temporary directed towards Arab and
especially Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, and permanent directed towards EU
and North American countries. Flows of temporary migrants to neighbouring Arab
countries have exceeded those of their permanent, circular, and temporary counterparts in
Europe and North America. Temporary migration takes various forms including official
secondment through public and governmental authorities, and working in branches of
Egyptian companies, especially in the construction sector (IOM, 2003), or working in the
private sector. Egyptian temporary migration flows comprise both highly skilled and
unskilled labour. Temporary migration to Arab countries is male-dominated, representing
around 90 per cent of migrant labourers. Temporary migrant labourers exceeded 2 million,
mainly working in Saudi Arabia, Libya, Jordan, and Kuwait. Migrants to those countries
comprise more than 85 per cent of the total number of Egyptian migrants (Zohry, 2006a).
Egypt is the largest country of origin of the migrant workers to Arab countries. In some
years 10 per cent of the Egyptian labour force migrated to Arab countries (Wahba, 2005).
There is a high concentration of both temporary and permanent emigrants in a few
countries with Saudi Arabia topping the list of receiving countries, as shown in Figure 1.
(IOM, 2003; Wahba, 2007).
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