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Home » Thinking of Moving Countries for Better Work and Life?
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Thinking of Moving Countries for Better Work and Life?

Yoli NgcakaniBy Yoli NgcakaniFebruary 6, 2026Updated:February 6, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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click to read the OECD Employment outlook report 2025

What the OECD’s 2025 Data Says—and How to Use It Strategically

Relocation decisions are often framed as emotional leaps: “There are no jobs here,” “The cost of living is killing me,” “I need a fresh start.”

But the OECD Employment Outlook 2025 quietly tells a much more empowering story—one where data, demographics, and timing matter more than luck.

If you’re considering relocating for better work and quality of life, here’s what the data says—and how to use it to your advantage.


1. The Global Job Market Isn’t Shrinking — It’s Running Out of People

One of the biggest takeaways from the OECD report is counterintuitive:
The problem in most developed economies is no longer job scarcity—it’s worker scarcity.

Across OECD countries, the working-age population (20–64) has stopped growing and is now shrinking, driven by low fertility and longer life expectancy. By 2060, the old-age dependency ratio will hit 52%, meaning fewer workers supporting more retirees OECD Employment Outlook 2025.

What this means for movers

  • Countries need workers more than they admit publicly.
  • Labour shortages persist even during economic slowdowns.
  • Migration is no longer a “nice to have”—it’s an economic necessity.

Strategic move:
Target countries with:

  • Declining working-age populations
  • High vacancy-to-unemployment ratios
  • Explicit labour-migration pathways tied to skills shortages

These countries are structurally incentivised to accept—and retain—you.


2. Migration Is a Growth Lever, Not a Political Side Issue

The report is unusually blunt: regular migrants already play a key role in sustaining OECD labour markets, and increasing migration is one of the few levers that can offset economic slowdown OECD Employment Outlook 2025.

If migration flows rise to levels seen in the most open OECD countries, GDP per capita growth improves measurably.

What this means for movers

  • Migrants are not “competing” with locals; they are plugging structural gaps.
  • Foreign-born workers are over-represented among:
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Self-employed professionals
    • High-growth service sectors

Strategic move:
Instead of asking “Which country is easiest to enter?”, ask:

  • Which countries explicitly link visas to labour shortages?
  • Where are migrants already contributing to employment growth?
  • Which systems reward regular, skilled, compliant migration?

Mobility works best where policy and economics align.


3. Real Wages Are Recovering — Slowly but Broadly

After years of inflation shock, real wages are growing again in almost all OECD countries. While many haven’t yet reached pre-2021 levels, the direction is positive, especially for lower and mid-income workers OECD Employment Outlook 2025.

Minimum wages, in particular, have outpaced inflation in most countries.

What this means for movers

  • The “race to the bottom” narrative is outdated.
  • Entry- and mid-level roles are stabilising faster than expected.
  • Wage compression is reducing extreme gaps between sectors.

Strategic move:
Relocation should be evaluated on net purchasing power, not headline salaries:

  • Real wage trends (not nominal pay)
  • Cost of housing, transport, childcare
  • Access to public services

A smaller salary in a stable, high-participation labour market often beats a higher salary in a volatile one.


4. Age Is Becoming an Asset, Not a Liability

This is one of the most overlooked insights in the report:
Older workers are now central to economic survival in OECD countries.

Employment growth over the last two years has been driven largely by people aged 55–64, not younger cohorts OECD Employment Outlook 2025.

What this means for movers

  • Mid-career and late-career professionals are increasingly valuable.
  • Experience-heavy roles are growing faster than physically demanding ones.
  • Countries are investing in:
    • Lifelong learning
    • Flexible work
    • Age-friendly employment practices

Strategic move:
If you’re 40+, relocation can be timing-positive if you:

  • Emphasise experience, adaptability, and mentoring value
  • Target countries with rising older-worker participation
  • Choose sectors where knowledge compounds (tech ops, compliance, health, education, infrastructure)

This is a demographic tailwind many people underestimate.


5. Skills and Mobility Matter More Than Credentials Alone

The report highlights a subtle but critical point: job-to-job mobility drives wage and productivity growth, yet mobility declines sharply with age unless supported by skills development OECD Employment Outlook 2025.

Countries that invest in continuous learning extract more value from migrants and older workers alike.

What this means for movers

  • Static careers age badly; adaptable ones travel well.
  • Employers value learning velocity more than perfect CV linearity.
  • Countries differ significantly in how well they support mid-career transitions.

Strategic move:
Before relocating, ask:

  • Does this country subsidise retraining or adult education?
  • Are credentials portable—or easily supplemented?
  • Is job switching culturally and legally supported?

Mobility within a country matters almost as much as mobility across borders.


The Bigger Insight: Relocation Is Now a Strategy, Not an Escape

The OECD data reframes global mobility entirely.

The best relocations aren’t driven by panic or politics—they’re driven by:

  • Demographic gaps
  • Labour shortages
  • Skills alignment
  • Policy intent

For individuals willing to read the signals, this is one of the most favourable mobility windows in decades.

Not because everything is easy—but because the need for workers is structural, persistent, and growing.

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© 2026 BorderlessSelf (TM) BorderlessSelf.com is a media and educational website providing informational content on global mobility, careers, and life transitions associated with relocating for work. We do not provide legal, visa, immigration, employment placement, or government services. Information on this site is for general guidance only and should not be relied upon as professional advice. Always consult with a qualified immigration, legal, or career professional for specific decisions related to visas, work permits, employment, or legal status.

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