Grioo.com   Grioo Pour Elle     Village   TV   Musique Forums   Agenda   Blogs  



grioo.com
Espace de discussion
 
RSS  FAQFAQ   RechercherRechercher   Liste des MembresListe des Membres   Groupes d'utilisateursGroupes d'utilisateurs   S'enregistrerS'enregistrer
 ProfilProfil   Se connecter pour vérifier ses messages privésSe connecter pour vérifier ses messages privés   ConnexionConnexion 

Des dizaines de millier de travailleurs portugais en Angola

 
Poster un nouveau sujet   Répondre au sujet       grioo.com Index du Forum -> Politique & Economie Africaines
Voir le sujet précédent :: Voir le sujet suivant  
Auteur Message
samuel
Grioonaute régulier


Inscrit le: 28 Jan 2005
Messages: 459

MessagePosté le: Jeu 22 Oct 2009 17:17    Sujet du message: Des dizaines de millier de travailleurs portugais en Angola Répondre en citant

On connaissait les migrants africains tentant de gagner l'Europe et souvent renvoyes chez eux par charters entiers. On s'entend meme souvent dire (y compris sur ce forum) ''retournez chez vous si vous n'etes pas contents!''. Bien evidemment, tout le monde a toujours suppose que l'emigration ne pouvait qu'etre a sens unique: ce sont les Africains qui veulent venir en Europe et non l'inverse. S'il y a des Europeens en Afrique, ce n'est qu'anecdotique ou a tout le moins ils y sont au titre de la cooperation technique. Mais des travailleurs immigres europeens tentant de gagner l'Afrique en nombre aussi important que les Africains qui echouent sur les cotes europeennes...laissez-moi rire.

Et pourtant le monde dans lequel nous vivons n'arrete pas de nous etonner chaque jour. Aujourd'hui, ce sont les Portugais qui emigrent en Angola. Vous allez sans doute penser qu'il ne s'agit que d'un phenomene anecdotique ou de quelques individus en mal de reperes. Eh bien ! detrompez-vous. Quand je dis que des Portugais emigrent en Angola, j'entends qu'ils sont des milliers, des dizaines de milliers, des centaines de milliers a venir y chercher du travail et a s'y installer. Tenez-vous bien! Au cours des cinq (5) dernieres annees, pas moins de cent mille (100.000) travailleurs immigres portugais ont ete recenses en Angola. Au cours des seuls trois premiers mois de l'annee 2009, plus de 7.500 Portugais ont emigre en Angola. Les demandes de visas a l'ambassade de l'Angola a Lisbonne sont plus importantes que dans n'importe quelle ambassade de France dans n'importe quel pays africain et on s'y bouscule par centaines comme on le ferait a Yaounde ou a Dakar. Tout comme ailleurs en Afrique, certains travailleurs portugais font la queue des 4 heures du matin.

Nous n'avons pas affaire ici a des travailleurs de la cooperation technique ou a des hyper-diplomes, mais bel et bien a des travailleurs immigres ordinaires desirant travailler dans la construction ou les transports en Angola.

Le pire dans cette histoire c'est que 40% des Angolais eux sont au chomage et commencent a ressentir la presence des Portugais comme une ''invasion''..... (ca ne vous dit rien?). Des manifestations d'hostilite semblables a celles qu'on observe a l'egard des Africains en Europe commencent a se faire jour surtout que les salaires angolais...sont deux a trois fois plus eleves que les salaires portugais! N'oubliez pas que l'Angola est aujourd'hui l'un des trois pays au taux de croissance le plus eleve au monde...de l'ordre de 20%.

Mais lisez plutot cet article du Wall Street Journal et vous serez edifies.


Citation:
The global economic crisis has hit small countries like Portugal particularly hard. With few natural resources and a service-driven economy, Portuguese laborers have long relied on seasonal construction jobs elsewhere in Europe, which have grown harder to find as other countries tighten their belts during the downturn. But Angola, Portugal’s former colony, is just emerging from four decades of war and is eager to funnel its oil money into construction and civil engineering projects that will restore its decimated infrastructure. And this frenzy of activity has created a booming economy over the last few years. Paradoxically, unemployment among native Angolans is at 40 percent, much higher than the 9 percent rate that is pushing Portuguese laborers to seek work outside of the country. While some Angolans are bitter about skilled Portuguese laborers sucking up jobs, scholars argue that to rebuild the country needs qualified workers from all vocations. – YaleGlobal
Angolan Riches Lure New Wave of Workers
Portuguese Professionals Flee the Downturn for Former Colony’s Vast Growth; ‘Anything can happen here’
Susan Ferreira
The Wall Street Journal , 29 September 2009
Nearly 35 years after winning independence from Portugal, Angola is being populated by its former colonizer once again -- this time by professionals and scores of workers laid off amid the economic slump.

Luis Amaro, a sales manager for Lisbon-based software company LocalSoft, saw the opportunity in July when he went to Angola on a business trip.

"Things are happening here. I can build a new life," Mr. Amaro remembered thinking. He plans to move to Luanda at the end of this year with his wife and teenage son.

He will leave behind his native Portugal, which has been hard hit by the global downturn. Unemployment in the second quarter was 9.2% and the economy is expected to shrink by 3.7% this year. Temporary and seasonal construction work in other European Union countries -- a mainstay for Portuguese laborers -- have been drying up. As workers from across Europe return to Portugal, a country of 10.6 million, they struggle to find jobs.

Portugal's former colony, meanwhile, has emerged in recent years as one of the world's fastest-growing economies. Angola's gross domestic product has grown well over 10% annually since 2004, and topped 20% in 2007, bolstered by oil production and mining. Even with the drop in oil prices in 2008, GDP grew 14.8% for the year.

Keen to rebuild infrastructure destroyed by more than four decades of war, Angola, with a population of 12.8 million, has experienced an explosion in civil-engineering and construction projects.

Neither country's government keeps exact numbers, but economists say an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 Portuguese nationals like Mr. Amaro have entered Angola over the past five years, not counting trips of long-term residents or people staying on short-term work visas. Manual laborers, doctors, engineers and bankers have flocked to the country. Demand for visas is so high that the most desperate job-seekers camp out overnight to get at the front of the line at the Angolan consulate in Lisbon.

"In the last few years, Angola is the country that has received the most emigrants" from Portugal, said Rui Pena Pires, a sociology professor at the CIES, the Center for Sociology Studies and Research, in Lisbon. According to the Angolan consulate, some 17,000 Portuguese nationals moved to Angola on visas of at least one year in 2006. For both 2007 and 2008, that number surged to roughly 24,000. By the first three months of 2009, nearly 7,700 Portuguese had packed their bags for Angola.

"We don't see it going down anytime soon," said Mr. Pires.

That movement is striking in contrast to European countries' efforts to tighten restrictions on immigration, including on people from their former colonies and territories.

Angola's recent growth spurt comes after decades of damage and stagnation due to military conflict. After centuries as a colony and then as an overseas province of Portugal, Angola's struggle for independence erupted in war in 1961. Angola declared independence on Nov. 11, 1975, but the country's rival political groups launched into a bloody civil war that killed and displaced millions. A cease-fire was reached in 2002. Since then, Angola has been in the process of recovery.

Filomeno Vieira Lopes, an economist and member of the Angolan opposition party Front for Democracy, said three factors have contributed to economic growth. "First, there was the rise in petrol prices and the rise in production; second, the interest from China; and now, all the rebuilding after the war," he said.

The need for infrastructure -- roads, railways, pipelines and skyscrapers -- created the most demand for labor. According to Portuguese government figures, Angola imported more than €2.27 billion ($3.34 billion) in goods from Portugal in 2008, up from €1.68 billion in 2007.

"There is not a single industry in Portugal that has not benefited from this," said Daniel Bessa, a former Portuguese minister of economy. In March of this year, Angolan President José Eduardo dos Santos and his Portuguese counterpart, Aníbal Cavaco Silva, signed a deal to create a joint Portuguese-Angolan investment bank.

While Angola is luring unemployed and underemployed Portuguese, it has many internal problems, including an unemployment rate of its own that has reached 40%, increasing inflation and widespread poverty. This reality has created a "certain a level of animosity," toward foreigners, who are seen as taking jobs from Angolans, said Mr. Vieira Lopes.
But for Justino Pinto de Andrade, a professor of economics at the Catholic University of Luanda, having foreigners -- particularly those who have come to work on rebuilding projects -- pour into his country is something positive, and temporary. Local companies were paralyzed for years during the wars, he said, putting the country's workers at a disadvantage in terms of training.
"Angola has to be constructed," said the professor. "Borders are disintegrating. They don't make sense in this globalized world. We need qualified people -- not just people with advanced school degrees, but people who are qualified in all senses of the word."

Mr. Amaro got a sense of that need when he first arrived at Luanda's Quatro de Fevereiro airport in Angola. "I left a country that was very calm, very organized and predictable," he said. "I entered a country where an agenda isn't possible. Traffic is chaotic. It'll take you three hours to cross 12 kilometers."

That disorder represented to him the frenzy of rebuilding.

João Carlos da Costa, an official at Jobfair Global Search, a Lisbon-based recruitment company, said he doesn't even bother advertising jobs. "If we said that we were looking for Portuguese applicants, we would have thousands at our door within the hour," he said.

One of the appeals of Angola's job market is high salaries. For many of Mr. da Costa's clients in Angola, a starting salary for an entry-level position in banking or civil engineering is between $2,000 and $5,000 a month. By comparison, a high starting rate in Portugal for a similar job is €1,000 a month.

The salary is what lured Domingos Da Rocha, a quarry worker, to Angola in late 2007, said Alice Silva, his wife who stayed behind in Boelhe, in northern Portugal.

Mr. Da Rocha was one of several dozen men from the small town who went off to Angola when local rock-quarry jobs began to dry up. Ms. Silva said her husband tried working in Switzerland, but "he didn't earn enough and he missed us."

Now, Mr. Da Rocha earns €2,000 a month working in a mine in Tulunga. There, he lives in a camp with other Portuguese and Angolan workers. He plans to return home in late September.

When Mr. Amaro goes to Luanda, Angola, to house-hunt in October, the software sales manager hopes to lead an expansion of his company, LocalSoft, throughout Angola and into neighboring countries.

"Anything can happen here," said Mr. Amaro. "It's chaotic -- but in a dynamic way."
Source:The Wall Street Journal
Revenir en haut de page
Voir le profil de l'utilisateur Envoyer un message privé
Montrer les messages depuis:   
Poster un nouveau sujet   Répondre au sujet       grioo.com Index du Forum -> Politique & Economie Africaines Toutes les heures sont au format GMT + 1 Heure
Page 1 sur 1

 
Sauter vers:  
Vous ne pouvez pas poster de nouveaux sujets dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas éditer vos messages dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas supprimer vos messages dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas voter dans les sondages de ce forum



Powered by phpBB © 2001 phpBB Group