Our refugee system is failing. Heres how we can fix it Alexander Betts

There are times when I feel
really quite ashamed

to be a European.

In the last year,

more than a million people
arrived in Europe in need of our help,

and our response,
frankly, has been pathetic.

There are just so many contradictions.

We mourn the tragic death

of two-year-old Alan Kurdi,

and yet, since then,
more than 200 children

have subsequently drowned
in the Mediterranean.

We have international treaties

that recognize that refugees
are a shared responsibility,

and yet we accept that tiny Lebanon

hosts more Syrians
than the whole of Europe combined.

We lament the existence
of human smugglers,

and yet we make that the only viable route

to seek asylum in Europe.

We have labor shortages,

and yet we exclude people who fit
our economic and demographic needs

from coming to Europe.

We proclaim our liberal values
in opposition to fundamentalist Islam,

and yet –

we have repressive policies

that detain child asylum seekers,

that separate children
from their families,

and that seize property from refugees.

What are we doing?

How has the situation come to this,

that we’ve adopted such an inhumane
response to a humanitarian crisis?

I don’t believe
it’s because people don’t care,

or at least I don’t want to believe
it’s because people don’t care.

I believe it’s because
our politicians lack a vision,

a vision for how to adapt
an international refugee system

created over 50 years ago

for a changing and globalized world.

And so what I want to do
is take a step back

and ask two really fundamental questions,

the two questions we all need to ask.

First, why is the current
system not working?

And second, what can we do to fix it?

So the modern refugee regime

was created in the aftermath
of the Second World War by these guys.

Its basic aim is to ensure

that when a state fails,
or worse, turns against its own people,

people have somewhere to go,

to live in safety and dignity
until they can go home.

It was created precisely for situations
like the situation we see in Syria today.

Through an international convention
signed by 147 governments,

the 1951 Convention
on the Status of Refugees,

and an international organization, UNHCR,

states committed to reciprocally
admit people onto their territory

who flee conflict and persecution.

But today, that system is failing.

In theory, refugees
have a right to seek asylum.

In practice, our immigration policies
block the path to safety.

In theory, refugees have a right
to a pathway to integration,

or return to the country
they’ve come from.

But in practice, they get stuck
in almost indefinite limbo.

In theory, refugees
are a shared global responsibility.

In practice, geography means
that countries proximate the conflict

take the overwhelming majority
of the world’s refugees.

The system isn’t broken
because the rules are wrong.

It’s that we’re not applying them
adequately to a changing world,

and that’s what we need to reconsider.

So I want to explain to you a little bit
about how the current system works.

How does the refugee regime actually work?

But not from a top-down
institutional perspective,

rather from the perspective of a refugee.

So imagine a Syrian woman.

Let’s call her Amira.

And Amira to me represents
many of the people I’ve met in the region.

Amira, like around 25 percent
of the world’s refugees,

is a woman with children,

and she can’t go home
because she comes from this city

that you see before you, Homs,

a once beautiful and historic city

now under rubble.

And so Amira can’t go back there.

But Amira also has no hope
of resettlement to a third country,

because that’s a lottery ticket

only available to less than one percent
of the world’s refugees.

So Amira and her family

face an almost impossible choice.

They have three basic options.

The first option is that Amira
can take her family to a camp.

In the camp, she might get assistance,

but there are very few prospects
for Amira and her family.

Camps are in bleak, arid locations,

often in the desert.

In the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan,

you can hear the shells
across the border in Syria at nighttime.

There’s restricted economic activity.

Education is often of poor quality.

And around the world,

some 80 percent of refugees
who are in camps

have to stay for at least five years.

It’s a miserable existence,

and that’s probably why, in reality,

only nine percent of Syrians
choose that option.

Alternatively, Amira can head
to an urban area

in a neighboring country,
like Amman or Beirut.

That’s an option that about 75 percent
of Syrian refugees have taken.

But there, there’s
great difficulty as well.

Refugees in such urban areas
don’t usually have the right to work.

They don’t usually get
significant access to assistance.

And so when Amira and her family
have used up their basic savings,

they’re left with very little
and likely to face urban destitution.

So there’s a third alternative,

and it’s one that increasing
numbers of Syrians are taking.

Amira can seek some hope for her family

by risking their lives
on a dangerous and perilous journey

to another country,

and it’s that which we’re seeing
in Europe today.

Around the world, we present refugees
with an almost impossible choice

between three options:

encampment, urban destitution
and dangerous journeys.

For refugees, that choice is
the global refugee regime today.

But I think it’s a false choice.

I think we can reconsider that choice.

The reason why we limit those options

is because we think

that those are the only options
that are available to refugees,

and they’re not.

Politicians frame the issue
as a zero-sum issue,

that if we benefit refugees,
we’re imposing costs on citizens.

We tend to have a collective assumption

that refugees are an inevitable cost
or burden to society.

But they don’t have to.
They can contribute.

So what I want to argue

is there are ways in which we can
expand that choice set

and still benefit everyone else:

the host states and communities,

our societies and refugees themselves.

And I want to suggest four ways

we can transform the paradigm
of how we think about refugees.

All four ways have one thing in common:

they’re all ways in which we take
the opportunities of globalization,

mobility and markets,

and update the way we think
about the refugee issue.

The first one I want to think about

is the idea of enabling environments,

and it starts from
a very basic recognition

that refugees are human beings
like everyone else,

but they’re just
in extraordinary circumstances.

Together with my colleagues in Oxford,

we’ve embarked on
a research project in Uganda

looking at the economic lives of refugees.

We chose Uganda not because
it’s representative of all host countries.

It’s not. It’s exceptional.

Unlike most host countries
around the world,

what Uganda has done

is give refugees economic opportunity.

It gives them the right to work.
It gives them freedom of movement.

And the results of that are extraordinary

both for refugees and the host community.

In the capital city, Kampala,

we found that 21 percent of refugees
own a business that employs other people,

and 40 percent of those employees

are nationals of the host country.

In other words, refugees are making jobs

for citizens of the host country.

Even in the camps,
we found extraordinary examples

of vibrant, flourishing
and entrepreneurial businesses.

For example, in a settlement
called Nakivale,

we found examples of Congolese refugees

running digital music exchange businesses.

We found a Rwandan
who runs a business that’s available

to allow the youth to play computer games

on recycled games consoles
and recycled televisions.

Against the odds of extreme constraint,

refugees are innovating,

and the gentleman you see before you
is a Congolese guy called Demou-Kay.

Demou-Kay arrived
in the settlement with very little,

but he wanted to be a filmmaker.

So with friends and colleagues,
he started a community radio station,

he rented a video camera,

and he’s now making films.

He made two documentary films

with and for our team,

and he’s making a successful business
out of very little.

It’s those kinds of examples

that should guide
our response to refugees.

Rather than seeing refugees

as inevitably dependent
upon humanitarian assistance,

we need to provide them
with opportunities for human flourishing.

Yes, clothes, blankets, shelter, food

are all important in the emergency phase,

but we need to also look beyond that.

We need to provide opportunities
to connectivity, electricity,

education, the right to work,

access to capital and banking.

All the ways in which we take for granted

that we are plugged in
to the global economy

can and should apply to refugees.

The second idea I want to discuss
is economic zones.

Unfortunately, not every
host country in the world

takes the approach Uganda has taken.

Most host countries don’t open up
their economies to refugees

in the same way.

But there are still pragmatic
alternative options that we can use.

Last April, I traveled to Jordan
with my colleague,

the development economist Paul Collier,

and we brainstormed an idea
while we were there

with the international community
and the government,

an idea to bring jobs to Syrians

while supporting Jordan’s
national development strategy.

The idea is for an economic zone,

one in which we could potentially
integrate the employment of refugees

alongside the employment
of Jordanian host nationals.

And just 15 minutes away
from the Zaatari refugee camp,

home to 83,000 refugees,

is an existing economic zone

called the King Hussein
Bin Talal Development Area.

The government has spent
over a hundred million dollars

connecting it to the electricity grid,
connecting it to the road network,

but it lacked two things:

access to labor and inward investment.

So what if refugees
were able to work there

rather than being stuck in camps,

able to support their families and develop
skills through vocational training

before they go back to Syria?

We recognized that
that could benefit Jordan,

whose development strategy
requires it to make the leap

as a middle income country
to manufacturing.

It could benefit refugees,
but it could also contribute

to the postconflict
reconstruction of Syria

by recognizing that we need
to incubate refugees

as the best source
of eventually rebuilding Syria.

We published the idea
in the journal Foreign Affairs.

King Abdullah has picked up on the idea.

It was announced at the London
Syria Conference two weeks ago,

and a pilot will begin in the summer.

(Applause)

The third idea that I want to put to you

is preference matching
between states and refugees

to lead to the kinds of happy outcomes
you see here in the selfie

featuring Angela Merkel
and a Syrian refugee.

What we rarely do is ask refugees
what they want, where they want to go,

but I’d argue we can do that

and still make everyone better off.

The economist Alvin Roth has developed
the idea of matching markets,

ways in which the preference ranking
of the parties shapes an eventual match.

My colleagues Will Jones
and Alex Teytelboym

have explored ways in which that idea
could be applied to refugees,

to ask refugees to rank
their preferred destinations,

but also allow states to rank
the types of refugees they want

on skills criteria or language criteria

and allow those to match.

Now, of course
you’d need to build in quotas

on things like diversity
and vulnerability,

but it’s a way of increasing
the possibilities of matching.

The matching idea
has been successfully used

to match, for instance,
students with university places,

to match kidney donors with patients,

and it underlies the kind of algorithms
that exist on dating websites.

So why not apply that
to give refugees greater choice?

It could also be used
at the national level,

where one of the great challenges we face

is to persuade local communities
to accept refugees.

And at the moment,
in my country, for instance,

we often send engineers to rural areas
and farmers to the cities,

which makes no sense at all.

So matching markets offer a potential way
to bring those preferences together

and listen to the needs and demands
of the populations that host

and the refugees themselves.

The fourth idea I want to put to you
is of humanitarian visas.

Much of the tragedy and chaos
we’ve seen in Europe

was entirely avoidable.

It stems from a fundamental contradiction
in Europe’s asylum policy,

which is the following:

that in order to seek asylum in Europe,

you have to arrive spontaneously
by embarking on those dangerous journeys

that I described.

But why should those journeys be necessary
in an era of the budget airline

and modern consular capabilities?

They’re completely unnecessary journeys,

and last year, they led to the deaths
of over 3,000 people

on Europe’s borders
and within European territory.

If refugees were simply allowed

to travel directly
and seek asylum in Europe,

we would avoid that,

and there’s a way of doing that

through something
called a humanitarian visa,

that allows people
to collect a visa at an embassy

or a consulate in a neighboring country

and then simply pay their own way

through a ferry or a flight to Europe.

It costs around a thousand euros

to take a smuggler
from Turkey to the Greek islands.

It costs 200 euros to take a budget
airline from Bodrum to Frankfurt.

If we allowed refugees to do that,
it would have major advantages.

It would save lives,

it would undercut
the entire market for smugglers,

and it would remove the chaos
we see from Europe’s front line

in areas like the Greek islands.

It’s politics that prevents us doing that
rather than a rational solution.

And this is an idea that has been applied.

Brazil has adopted a pioneering approach

where over 2,000 Syrians
have been able to get humanitarian visas,

enter Brazil, and claim refugee status
on arrival in Brazil.

And in that scheme,
every Syrian who has gone through it

has received refugee status
and been recognized as a genuine refugee.

There is a historical precedent
for it as well.

Between 1922 and 1942,

these Nansen passports
were used as travel documents

to allow 450,000 Assyrians,
Turks and Chechens

to travel across Europe

and claim refugee status
elsewhere in Europe.

And the Nansen
International Refugee Office

received the Nobel Peace Prize

in recognition of this
being a viable strategy.

So all four of these ideas
that I’ve presented you

are ways in which we can expand
Amira’s choice set.

They’re ways in which we can have
greater choice for refugees

beyond those basic,
impossible three options

I explained to you

and still leave others better off.

In conclusion,
we really need a new vision,

a vision that enlarges
the choices of refugees

but recognizes that they
don’t have to be a burden.

There’s nothing inevitable
about refugees being a cost.

Yes, they are a humanitarian
responsibility,

but they’re human beings
with skills, talents, aspirations,

with the ability to make
contributions – if we let them.

In the new world,

migration is not going to go away.

What we’ve seen in Europe
will be with us for many years.

People will continue to travel,

they’ll continue to be displaced,

and we need to find rational,
realistic ways of managing this –

not based on the old logics
of humanitarian assistance,

not based on logics of charity,

but building on the opportunities

offered by globalization,
markets and mobility.

I’d urge you all to wake up
and urge our politicians

to wake up to this challenge.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)