World Migration Report 2026’ released by
the International Organization for Migration
International Organization for Migration released the
World Migration Report 2026, highlighting global migration trends, major
migration corridors, displacement patterns, and the growing role of migration
in development and geopolitics.
About the Report
¨
The World Migration
Report 2026 is the thirteenth edition of the flagship report published by the
International Organization for Migration to improve understanding of migration
and mobility worldwide.
The report is divided into two parts
¨
Part I presents key
global and regional migration statistics,
¨
Part II provides
evidence-based analysis of emerging migration issues such as climate mobility,
internal displacement, migration pathways, migration and development, and
disability-related migration challenges.
¨
It examines migration
trends in the context of geopolitical tensions, environmental degradation,
technological change, demographic shifts, and humanitarian crises, while also
highlighting the developmental role of migrants and diasporas.
Key Findings of the Report
Around 304 million people were living outside their
country of birth by mid-2024, accounting for 3.7% of the global population,
compared to 2.9% in 1990.
The Mexico–United States corridor remained
the world’s largest migration corridor with around 11 million migrants. Other
major corridors included:
¨
Afghanistan–Iran
¨
Syria–Türkiye
¨
Russia–Ukraine
¨
India–United Arab
Emirates
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India–United States.
The India–United Arab Emirates corridor became the
fifth-largest migration corridor globally, driven mainly by migrant
workers.Indians constituted the largest nationality group in the UAE, with over
three million Indians residing there.The India–United States corridor ranked as
the sixth-largest migration corridor in the world and the second-largest
involving North America after the Mexico–U.S. corridor.Around 3.2 million
Indian migrants were living in the United States in 2024, making Indians the
second-largest foreign-born group after Mexicans.Indian migration to the U.S.
has been driven significantly by highly skilled workers and international
students.The report highlighted the growing influence of the Indian diaspora in
the United States in strengthening India–U.S. relations through organisations
such as the United States–India Political Action Committee (USINPAC),
particularly in areas like trade, defence cooperation, and visa policies.
Other major Asian migration corridors
included:
¨
Bangladesh–India (11th
largest globally)
¨
India–Saudi Arabia (14th
largest globally).
Migration from South Asian countries such as India,
Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Myanmar remained predominantly male-dominated, mainly
due to labour migration towards Gulf and South-East Asian countries in sectors
such as construction, manufacturing, and agriculture.Gulf countries such as the
United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait recorded a significantly higher
proportion of male immigrants, while India had a relatively higher share of
female immigrants.