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Georgia's demographic woes

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  • Georgia's demographic woes

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Dec 15 2004

    Georgia's demographic woes
    By M. Alkhazashvili

    Civil confrontation, ethnic conflicts, economic collapse, a leap in
    unemployment and many other negative factors have led to many
    Georgians to leave the country in the last fifteen years.

    The census conducted in 2002 shows that within the territory under
    Georgia's jurisdiction (excluding separatist Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia) 4,361,000 people live, some 431,000 less than in the 1989
    census.

    The situation is worse if the 162,000 refugees who left the
    separatist-controlled territories are taken into account. Urban
    population decreased by 7,000 and rural population by 323,000.

    Experts estimate that approximately one million people - or one in
    five of the population - left the country because of the developments
    in Georgia in the 1990s. These were mainly young people - the
    educated, qualified sector of the population - meaning that the
    population left behind has become older and older.

    Many of those to leave were of Abkhaz ethnicity: the number of Abkhaz
    in Georgia, including Abkhazia, has halved and is now about 45,000 -
    42,000 of whom live in the separatist republic, and the rest in
    different regions of Georgia. Around 50,000 Abkhaz live abroad,
    mainly in Russia.

    The number of Ossetians has also halved. There are currently 84,000
    in the country, including 46,000 who live in Tskhinvali controlled
    territory. 79,000 Ossetians now live abroad, again, mainly in Russia.


    Other citizens of non-Georgian ethnicity have also left the country.
    Of the 341,000 Russians who used to live here, only 100,000 remain;
    while people of Armenian origin now number 281,000, a decrease of
    155,000. The number of Azeri leaving the country is lower - around
    22,000 - leaving 284,000 in the country.

    Although there are social reasons for such an exodus, for the most
    part the high number of emigrants is due to economic reasons.
    According to official statistics, there are some 620,000 registered
    unemployed people in Georgia, 33 percent have a University education
    and 75 percent of whom live in urban areas. 40 percent are under
    thirty and 22 percent have had no permanent job since the beginning
    of the 1990s.

    Parliament is shortly to adopt the new Tax Code and law on financial
    amnesty, and it is hoped that this will provide a boost to the
    economy, and that as a result the hemorrhaging of the Georgian
    population will be brought to a halt.
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