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Outward Bound: Emigration Stats Don't Match Reality Specialists Say

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  • Outward Bound: Emigration Stats Don't Match Reality Specialists Say

    OUTWARD BOUND: EMIGRATION STATS DON'T MATCH REALITY SPECIALISTS SAY

    Society | 04.02.14 | 15:39

    Photolure

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Armenian political analysts and economists consider controversial the
    latest out-migration figures published by the National Statistical
    Service (NSS) that suggest that fewer people left the country in 2013
    than in previous years.

    According to the statistics, the number of people who entered Armenia
    in 2013 made a total of 1,452,085, while the number of those who
    departed from the country totaled 1,494,086. The negative balance
    thus stands at 42,001 people, which is by 7,659 less than in 2012
    (-49,660), which means that the rate of out-migration in 2013 slowed
    down as compared to the previous years.

    According to the NSS data, passenger traffic by air was down 0.3
    percent, which shows no negative balance, but instead the negative
    balance is present at the land checkpoints at the Armenian-Georgian
    border that people cross by buses or minibuses as a less expensive
    and suitable way of traveling for families.

    According to the 2013 data a total of 39,726 citizens left the country
    through the Bagratashen checkpoint as compared to 21,144 in 2012. The
    figures for the Bavra checkpoint in 2013 and 2012 made 13,000 and
    8,288, respectively.

    "The population shrinks and the outmigration is calculated from
    that reduced number. If it continues like that and there is barely a
    population left in Armenia to emigrate, for example, in 10 years, I
    assure you that the outmigration rate will be down to 10,000-15,000,"
    former prime minister, now opposition lawmaker Hrant Bagratyan told
    RFE/RL's Armenian Service.

    Demographers say that while in the past unemployment and poor economic
    conditions were a valid reason for outmigration, then today despair,
    lack of confidence in the future in many cases come as the primary
    cause of emigration, people no longer believe that their children
    can have a good future in their homeland.

    "Recently moral and psychological reasons have become more significant
    for people. It can also be observed within individual surroundings,
    in private conversations, many feel that way, they feel frustrated,
    which is connected with the moral and psychological situation in the
    country. No tendency for change or improvement of this situation can
    be observed yet," demographer Ruben Yeganyan says.

    A majority of emigrants are outraged by the inequality of opportunities
    to undertake economic activity in the country, injustices and
    exploitation of hired labor.

    "People understand the objective difficulties of Armenia, such as
    the blockade, a constant threat of war, objective difficulties of
    carrying out economic activities. But they no longer understand that
    these objective reasons are applicable only to some. A biological
    instinct of a 'closed area' is used, in this case those participating
    in the government of the country maul those who do not," ethnographer
    Hranush Kharatyan told ArmeniaNow.

    According to her, it is possible to curb emigration if all people are
    equal to law, if no one hinders them to live, work and create. If
    people get help in doing all that, according to Kharatyan, then
    miracles can happen even in 'closed areas'.

    "Even in a blockaded Armenia the socio-economic climate will be changed
    if those in the government are guided by the principle of protecting
    the rights and equality of opportunity in our country. Ten percent of
    our country's population is involved in the government system. The
    already scarce resources are directed at the maintenance of that 10
    percent. This is an abnormal phenomenon. On the one hand there is an
    inflated government apparatus that siphons out the last resources of
    the people, on the other hand the government itself is an obstacle,"
    says the ethnographer.

    Government officials in Armenia have long downplayed the rate of
    emigration from the country, insisting that many of those who do go
    outside for migrant work remain very much attached to their homeland
    and participate in its economic life by wiring back home vital cash
    remittances.

    While acknowledging the presence of social and economic problems in the
    country that make a certain number of people seek better opportunities
    abroad, in one interview last year President Serzh Sargsyan accused
    certain media of creating an improper atmosphere that he implied
    contributed to people's despair and eventual decisions to leave.

    http://armenianow.com/society/51758/armenia_society_migration_balance_statistics

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