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Vicious circle: will ageing populations lock the EU into immigrant exclusion?

There is an urgent need for Europe to engage with the self-defeating politics of ageing.

Vicious circle: will ageing populations lock the EU into immigrant exclusion?
Lega leader Matteo Salvini on the tv show Porta a Porta with a photo of migrants as the backdrop, Rome, October 7, 2020 | Insidefoto/PA. All rights reserved.
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The EU is currently experiencing the coincidence of two phenomena: the demise of its decades-old economic model, based on the successive enlargement of the EU, and the ageing of European populations, leading to a slow-down of the economy.

Since the 1950s, the Union has operated a regulatory model on migration whose sole point was the promotion of growth by facilitating mobility amongst member states. Now, the EU is approaching the end of the road as far as admitting new members is concerned. At the same time, it is becoming increasingly costly and difficult to engage EU neighbours in effective border control cooperation, with the most dire consequences for migrants and refugees.

But, most importantly, EU demographics today are radically different from those of earlier decades. While the EU regulatory model on migration and asylum is clearly outdated, there are reasons to doubt that it will be possible to negotiate a successor model.  Paradoxically, the ageing of populations will block this important policy process, pushing the EU, its member states and its peoples into a vicious circle.