2011-04-08
The New Great Trek
by Johann van Rooyen
(dated at least March 2001)
The scope of South Africa's exodus
Thousands of predominantly-white, young, skilled South Africans of all 
persuasions, regions and professions are leaving the country each year 
to settle in mainly Australia, New Zealand, Britain, the USA and Canada. 
Official statistics suggest that just more than 8 200 people had 
emigrated from South Africa during 1998, but due to an under-reporting 
of between one-half and two-thirds, the unofficial total will have been 
between 16 000 and 25 000. These latest emigrants joined the 550 000 
emigrants who have officially left since 1945, in addition to the 500 
000 to one million emigrants who may have left the country unofficially 
during this period.
The real significance of this exodus can be found primarily not so much 
in the sheer size of the exodus, even though it is large by any 
standard, but in the fact that these emigrants represent a huge loss of 
human capital - they are mostly professionals and their skills and 
ability to create wealth and jobs cannot be replaced overnight, if at 
all. In addition, emigration on this scale raises the questions of how 
many more people may join this new Trek, and whether it emigration will 
continue at current levels or whether a sudden mass exodus is a 
possibility?
Official statistics vs. the actual numbers: the 2:1 and 3:1 ratios
As mentioned earlier, the number of people leaving South Africa each 
year is at least double and could be triple the official numbers 
provided by Statistics South Africa. The reason for this is because many 
people who leave the country do so under the pretext of temporary visits 
and do not state on their departure forms that they are emigrating, but 
merely going on holiday - they will therefore not appear in the official 
emigration statistics. The result is the huge discrepancy between 
official or self-declared emigrants and unofficial emigrant numbers (the 
undocumented migrants). Even the South African authorities are aware of 
this phenomenon, but are powerless to do anything about it, according to 
Mark Orkin, chief of Statistics South Africa.
The discrepancies between official and unofficial statistics (the latter 
obtained from the embassies and immigration departments of several 
countries) are glaringly obvious: -Official South African figures claim 
that 29 000 South Africans had settled in the UK between 1984 and 1993, 
compared to figure of 100 000 claimed by British sources. … Assuming 
that the British numbers are the correct version, three times more 
emigrants arrived in the UK than was counted by South African sources. 
For the period of 1994-1997, 8 874 South Africans entered the UK as 
immigrants although the South African official sources counted only 4 
654 - almost double.
The logistics of emigration
...the presence of hundreds of thousands of South African emigrants all 
over the world is evidence of the fact that, irrespective of obstacles 
and sacrifices, emigration has become a realistic and logical choice for 
many predominantly white South Africans and is viewed as a readily 
available alternative to life in South Africa. However, there are at 
least four distinct obstacles facing a typical emigrant: the first being 
emotional and psychological barriers; the steep costs of emigration; the 
financial and administrative barriers erected by the South African 
authorities; the entry restrictions placed on emigration by various 
countries through a multitude of entry requirements.
The key to successful emigration lies in overcoming these barriers one 
by one, but even the most meticulous planning and the highest number of 
emigration points cannot always overcome what could be the biggest 
hurdle, namely the emotional costs of emigration - saying goodbye to 
family, friends, often the family pet, to a particular lifestyle, 
traditions and familiar things, and to one's country of birth and all it 
represents - these all are the things that often prove to be the biggest 
obstacle.
Psychological and emotional aspects
Among the typical comments from emigrants describing the pain and 
emotional turmoil are the following: when she finally got on the plane, 
(she) cried so much that the air hostess asked her if there had been a 
death in the family - emigrant, Sydney.
...this may also explain why so many people do not to use the term 
emigration, i.e. because of its finality - they refer instead 
euphemistically to `relocation` and to `going overseas for a while` - in 
fact, as mentioned elsewhere, up to two-thirds of people leaving South 
Africa each year do not formally `emigrate`, although this is probably 
largely because of practical rather than emotional reasons.
Many emigrants have to cope with feelings of guilt for leaving the 
country in which they grew up and which educated them - they are often 
accused of having lived off the fat of the land and wanting to jump ship 
when the going gets tough. However, up to two thirds of emigrants, 
according to an Idasa survey, have a desire to stay and help build South 
Africa, but feel compelled to leave because of crime.
Why do people leave South Africa?
...South African emigrants are motivated by a number of typical `push` 
factors and these are countered by many `pull` factors. The typical 
emigrant will list various `push` factors in order of importance, among 
which will be uncertainty about the future, falling standards, the 
economy, affirmative action and bleak job prospects, and loss of faith 
in the ANC-led government, but most importantly, he or she will list 
violent crime as the real reason for wanting to emigrate. Surveys 
indicate that 60% of emigrants regard crime as the major reason for 
leaving South Africa, while 19% cite concern for their children's 
education. A total of 15% of emigrants said that they were looking for a 
better quality of life, 14% wanted better prospects in general, 20% were 
concerned about healthcare, and 10% cited the government, the economy 
and affirmative action as reasons for emigrating.
In this chapter each of these issues will be examined in the context in 
which they contribute to emigration from South Africa.
The emigration debate
Emigration has always been an emotional issue in South Africa largely 
because it has always been viewed from a political perspective, rather 
than as a social or economic phenomenon. As the numbers of emigrants 
increased and surpassed the numbers of immigrants during the second half 
of the 1990s, emotions rose to new levels and the opposition to 
emigration fiercer - arguments for and against emigration became more 
politicised, personal and took on a racial flavour. This is not 
surprising as the vast majority of emigrants are white and the vast 
majority of whites voted against the ANC in both post-apartheid 
elections. In South Africa's current political climate, the 
anti-government sentiment of many whites is easily construed as 
disloyalty against the ANC and against the country - the perception is 
that emigrants are disloyal South Africans.
The debate is structured as follows: while the one side is questioning 
the loyalty and patriotism of those who were leaving, the other side 
points to the socio-political conditions that cause people to leave the 
country and insists that emigration is a constitutional and human right. 
The emigration debate was fuelled by former president Nelson Mandela's 
comments in 1998, that `real South Africans are ...not going to run 
away`. While Mandela received much support for calling a `spade a 
spade`, his comments also drew sharp criticism from some South Africans 
for what they perceived as interference in their democratic right to 
emigrate, while others demanded that the President address the 
underlying causes for emigration rather than attacking emigrants.
Despite the arguments between those who criticise emigration and those 
who defend the freedom to emigrate, which are based mostly on abstract 
emotional terms such as patriotism, racism and anger towards the 
government, the real issue revolves around the impact that emigration 
has on the South African economy. In other words, what is the cost of 
emigration to the country in terms of the outflow of skills and capital, 
especially in the absence of a compensating inflow of skilled immigrants?
...the magnitude of the current brain drain and the potential flight of 
skills from South Africa are truly shocking. Surveys commissioned by the 
Sunday Times in 1998 concluded that between 71% and 74% of professional 
people in South Africa was considering emigrating. The survey found that 
almost a similar percentage of skilled blacks also considered leaving 
the country, although three quarters of these would do so for study 
purposes, that is, not permanently. The survey was extensive and 
received 11 000 individual responses from those with professional 
qualifications, and despite some criticism against its methodology, the 
survey provided a fairly representative sampling of the opinion of 
professionals...
However, the converse is also true. South Africa gains skills from 
immigrants and it is an irrefutable fact that for a long time officially 
South Africa had a net gain of skilled people because of migrants. These 
people came to South Africa with their degrees, skills and capital to 
the great benefit of the country - referred to as the `brain-gain`. For 
this very reason it is so difficult to understand or justify the 
bureaucratic bungling of the Department of Home Affairs when issuing 
work and residency permits to foreign skilled workers.
While the decline in immigration during the 1990s was partially a result 
of the unstable political situation and because of violence and crime, 
it was also a result of the Department of Home Affairs` absurdly 
stringent immigration policies and restrictions on work and residency 
visas. While South Africa has an urgent need for professionals in most 
categories, official policies have led to a decline in the numbers of 
professionals such as doctors, managers and engineers entering the 
country over the past five years: between 1993 and 1998 the number of 
professional immigrants has declined by 74%, from 1,171 in 1993 to 307 
in 1998.
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