NewsBrain drain: Russia sees largest emigration wave in 20 years

Brain drain: Russia sees largest emigration wave in 20 years

Since February 2022, the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, nearly 700,000 residents have left Russia, reported the independent Russian portal Moscow Times. Approximately 100,000 Russians relocated to Armenia, 80,000 to Kazakhstan, and 74,000 to Georgia, according to the service. This wave of emigration is referred to as a "brain drain."

Since the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine, 700,000 people have left Russia.
Since the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine, 700,000 people have left Russia.
Images source: © Getty Images | Artem Priakhin, LightRocket via Getty Images, SOPA Images

16 July 2024 17:56

Roughly 80,000 Russian residents moved to Israel, 48,000 to the USA, and 36,000 to Germany. The Netherlands received 16,000 Russians, Spain 16,000, Latvia 18,000, and Serbia 30,000. Currently, there are 28,000 more Russians with residence permits in Turkey than before the invasion of Ukraine. However, as noted by the portal, renewing this document there has become much more challenging.

Moscow Times, which presented these reports based on statistics from host countries, they emphasized that it could not access all the data. Thailand and Indonesia did not provide information, Cyprus stated that it does not keep records of arrivals from Russia, and Portugal only published data for the previous year. Additionally, the collected information does not show how many people obtained the right to reside in a given place but then decided to leave and possibly return to their homeland.

The largest wave of emigration from Russia

Although relatively few people have left Russia (about 0.5% of the population), the current wave of emigration is the largest in 20 years, noted the portal The Bell, quoting demographer Salawat Abyłkalikow. In his opinion, this emigration "has the nature of a brain drain", because "people with very high levels of social capital, many young specialists" have left.

Russia is already experiencing labour market shortages, and it is expected that these will increase. The Ministry of Labour expects that by 2030, the country will lack 2.4 million workers, recalled the Moscow Times.

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