Photo courtesy of IPS
A recent IPS study brings out the reality of Sri Lankan Female Migrant Workers (FMWs), particularly those engaged in domestic work across the Middle East. These women juggle multiple roles across various locations handling extra tasks often beyond their contractual obligations. Despite the heavy workload, they often do not receive even their agreed upon payment, which delays the timely transfer of money to their families, making it difficult for them to meet basic needs such as food, education, health and housing, ultimately leading to a shortfall in the country’s expected foreign exchange inflows, diminishing the broader economic gains of labour migration.
Trends in migration
The female migration pattern has fluctuated notably over recent years. In 2018, considered a normal year before the economic crisis, women made up 38.6% (81,499) of total departures for foreign employment. However in 2023, during the peak of the economic crisis, their share increased to 44.7% (133,048).
Why women migrate
For many FMWs, migration is not just a choice but a necessity, beginning with the hope of escaping poverty, supporting their families or securing a better future. The reasons women migrate are varied and deeply personal. But for migrant mothers, the journey takes on an even deeper meaning. Unlike other migrant women, they carry not only the weight of their struggles to strive for their survival but also the dreams for the future of their children.
Many migrant mothers with school children endure long working hours, difficult working conditions and emotional sacrifices to build a better future for their children. For them, education is often seen as the pathway out of this vicious cycle of poverty. Education, something that many migrant mothers may have missed, motivates them to convert every penny earned into funds to invest in better quality education. A UN Women Asia-Pacific study reveals that many female migrant workers send money home explicitly for school related costs such as books, tuition and transport despite the loneliness, overwork or even abuse they may face abroad.
Unpaid wages, unfulfilled promises
The issue of non-payment of wages goes far beyond simply not receiving wages for hard work when the financial gap created by missing wages turns a mother’s sacrifice into a painful struggle, thus delaying her dreams of seeing her children receive proper education.
One such example from IPS’s recent study highlights the real struggles behind these statistics. It is about a woman with two school going children who migrated to Oman to work as a domestic worker hoping to give her children a better life through the income she would earn. However, once in Oman, she was not paid her salary for several months. She pleaded for her overdue payments as her children’s schooling depended entirely on the remittances she had planned to send back home.
In Sri Lanka, when FDWs face such issues while working abroad they or their next of kin (NOK) can make a complaint to the SLBFE. When such complaints are received, the SLBFE reviews the details and then conducts an inquiry involving both the NOK of the migrant worker and the local recruitment agent. In this case during the SLBFE inquiry the FDW’s husband, acting as her NOK, revealed that she had not received her salary for three consecutive months.
This situation is not isolated. Delayed or unpaid wages among domestic workers in the Gulf countries are commonplace. A major issue in this context is that the recruitment culture for FDWs from Sri Lanka to the Middle East involves the employer paying an upfront incentive to the FDW before she takes up the employment overseas. This shifts the expectation by the employer that the FDW needs to continue working no matter what the situation. But this particular family’s situation was especially vulnerable. In this case the husband, who was unemployed at the time due to health reasons, explained that they had no other source of income. The family had been relying solely on her expected earnings to fund their children’s education.
Mother’s absence costs more than earnings
While remittances bring clear financial benefits, it is crucial to look beyond the economic lens and consider what migration truly costs mothers and families as it leaves a deep void in the upbringing of a child who must grow up without the daily care of a mother.
For the children left behind in the country of origin, the concerns primarily centre on “their social, educational, behavioural, and psychological development”.
Indeed, academic challenges exist broadly as evidenced by the fact that nearly 50% of students in Sri Lanka fail their O/L examinations even with the presence of both parents. But the absence of a mother due to migration can compound these challenges. Since the mother is away, it hurts a child’s life in many ways as no one can replace a mother’s love and care.
For instance, a real life case reflecting these concerns is that of a mother from Badulla who had spent over 20 years working in the Middle East. During her long absence, her husband became an alcoholic. One of her daughters was unable to get through the O’L exams and her other daughter ran away with a boy. As such the absence of a mother, along with not having proper care at home and poor money management, can cause the children’s education falling apart, turning the mother’s dream into a fading hope.
This is not just one story; there are many similar incidents. These real life stories align closely with the findings from the other studies supporting the idea that the absence of a primary caregiver, particularly the mother, can lead to educational development and emotional distress due to inadequate protection, particularly when fathers or other caregivers cannot provide necessary support leading to increased vulnerability among these children.
Balancing hope with the hardships of migration
The SLBFE has set plans to facilitate 340,000 foreign employment opportunities by 2025, marking the highest number of total departures for foreign employment in Sri Lanka’s history. It is important to recognise the broader economic and social costs associated with migration, even as the country increasingly relies on sending record numbers of workers abroad as a strategy to reduce domestic unemployment and boost foreign exchange earnings.
These stories of FMWs serve as a powerful reminder of the paradox of migration: Hopes for a better life versus the cost of emotional and financial hardships. This paradox underscores the urgent need for stronger policy measures to ensure that migration is safe, fair and truly beneficial both for the workers and for national development.
Recommendations
To address financial challenges faced by migrant mothers due to delayed wages:
- Maintain employer accountability frameworks with wage protection mechanisms for the employees:
- Establish a Wage Protection System (WPS): The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs and the Qatar Central Bank launched WPS, an electronic system to track and record the worker wage payment process in Qatar. To ensure timely salary payments, the SLBFE can maintain a database that enables recruitment agencies/employers to report on the payment status at three or six month intervals each year and upload verified payment slips as supporting documentation to ensure accuracy of the status.
- Public Disclosure of Defaulters: By reviewing the database, the SLBFE can publicly disclose the names of employers and recruitment agencies who fail to meet payment deadlines, thereby increasing transparency and encouraging timely payments.
- Good Employer/Agency List: Employers who remit their payments on time can be placed on a “good employer/agency list”, which serves as a positive reputational marker, motivating employers to maintain fair labour practices.
To address the educational and emotional challenges faced by children of migrant mothers:
- Focus on Family Support Initiatives: The SLBFE is currently granting scholarships for children of migrant workers. Rather than relying solely on scholarships, having a revolving fund or emergency grant system in place, which can be accessed more quickly when wage delays are detected. The fund could be set up by the SLBFE in collaboration with local or international partners such as private sector companies or organisations focused on migrant welfare.
Sri Lanka can monitor sensitive issues such as the impact of migrating mothers and the sacrifices made for their children’s education. Protecting the well-being of migrant workers is not just a social imperative; it also supports national goals of reducing unemployment and increasing foreign exchange earnings. By aligning worker protection with economic development, Sri Lanka can fully realise the benefits of labour migration for families, ensuring that the sacrifices made by migrant mothers are not in vain and their hope for their children’s futures can blossom into something real.