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Central Asians Leaving Russia: Flood Or Trickle?

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  • Central Asians Leaving Russia: Flood Or Trickle?

    CENTRAL ASIANS LEAVING RUSSIA: FLOOD OR TRICKLE?

    EurasiaNet.org
    Feb 9 2015

    February 8, 2015 - 11:55pm, by David Trilling

    It's February, so Muscovites are grumbling about their city's slippery
    sidewalks. The complaint isn't unusual in winter, but this year many
    say they know why everything is covered in ice: The "Tajiks" have left.

    Russian media report that the collapse of the ruble and strict new
    rules for migrant laborers have encouraged an exodus of Central
    Asians. But preliminary numbers are far smaller than many Muscovites
    believe. Besides, new government hurdles can be overcome with a bribe.

    The startling number often reported and repeated is 70 percent
    fewer labor migrants than last year. It dates back to January 7,
    from comments by the head of the Federal Migration Service (FMS),
    Konstantin Romodanovsky, who cited it as the decrease in arriving
    migrants year on year. But the comparison is of dubious statistical
    value, referring only to the first week of 2015, which falls amid
    Russia's protracted winter holidays, and also happened to be the
    first week that the stringent new rules were in place. Nonetheless,
    even migrants quote the figure when asked for estimates of how many
    of their compatriots have chosen to leave.

    Last week FMS offered more detailed figures. In January, compared
    with a year earlier, the number of Uzbek citizens in Russia fell
    4.3 percent and Tajik citizens by 2.2 percent, according to the RBK
    business-news website. Yet the number of Kyrgyzstanis had grown by
    3.8 percent. (Numbers showing departures in the second half of the
    year are misleading, as traditionally many migrants leave Russia each
    winter when seasonal work dries up.)

    No doubt, economic factors are pushing Central Asians to weigh the
    benefits of staying in Russia. The country's economy is expected to
    contract 4.8 percent this year, according to the EBRD. In the last
    12 months, the ruble has already fallen 50 percent, slashing real
    wages and the money migrants send home.

    In a covered market in Moscow's Khamovniki District, a
    dried-fruit-and-nut seller from northern Tajikistan estimates his
    profit margins have shrunk 30 percent since last summer, even though
    he has upped his prices in rubles by 40 percent over the same period.

    For now, like many others, he plans to keep trying his luck in Russia.

    If the ruble falls below 80 to the dollar - it has fallen from 33 to 67
    in the last year - he will seriously consider leaving, he said. If it
    hits 100, he will definitely leave, and "eat bread instead of bread
    and butter."

    He thinks the overwhelming majority of migrants leaving Russia are
    laborers unable to find work or break even living in the expensive
    Russian capital. Traders such as himself enjoy a bigger cushion
    because they started with such huge markups, he explains.

    New Russian regulations are also making migrants weigh their options.

    Since New Year's Day, foreign workers have been required to take
    Russian language and history tests, and sign up for health insurance.

    They must also pay three times more than before for Moscow work
    permits. Some media have reported days-long lines and inefficient
    bureaucracies at processing centers.

    Two Tajikistanis, speaking separately, claimed it is easier to pay a
    bribe. Both said the going rate for the necessary papers, including
    proof of passing the tests, was approximately 16,000-22,000 rubles
    ($239-$329). But even after that payout - equivalent to two to four
    weeks' wages for many - migrants still must pay 4,000 per month for
    a Moscow work permit.

    Confusion about the new rules abounds. Two middle-aged Uzbekistani
    janitors who have worked in the Russian capital for years insisted
    they do not need to take the exams because they were born before 1991.

    But FMS regulations require the exam for everyone from outside the
    new Eurasian Economic Union.

    Also under rules adopted on January 1, citizens of Tajikistan and
    Uzbekistan may only travel to Russia on international passports.

    Kyrgyzstanis, another large migrant community, can continue using
    their national ID cards, however, because their country is scheduled
    to join the Russia-led EEU in May.

    In fact, statistics suggest the EEU is encouraging migration to
    Russia. According to the FMS figures, the number of Armenian nationals
    in Russia grew 10.2 percent; Belarusians are up 32.6 percent; Kazakhs
    4.5 percent. (Armenia joined the EEU on January 2; Kazakhstan and
    Belarus, along with Russia, were founding members.)

    Migrant-rights activists say it is too early to make conclusions, but
    some expect the floundering economy and new regulations to encourage
    20-25 percent of migrants to leave. The true test will be in the
    spring, when Central Asian workers traditionally flock to Russia to
    find work in construction, an industry that seems certain to be hurt
    by Russia's fast-shrinking economy.

    The real scale of the changes in migrant figures - just like the
    real numbers of Central Asian migrants in Russia overall - is hard to
    gauge. Some agencies count apples, some count oranges, and it is not
    clear if anyone's numbers take into account Central Asians traveling
    on Russian passports, of which there are plenty. (In absolute terms,
    estimates of Uzbek nationals, for example, vary from 2.5 million to 5
    million. Estimates of Kyrgyz and Tajik citizens tend to hover around
    a million each.)

    Despite the new challenges, several Central Asians working in Moscow
    argued that they have little choice but to stay because there are
    few jobs at home.

    The fruit-and-nut seller from northern Tajikistan expects a large
    number of his compatriots to continue trying their luck in Russia.

    "There are no jobs" in Tajikistan, he said. "If people all go home,
    they'll be stealing from each other. They'll have to come back. If
    they don't, there will be another civil war."

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/71981

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