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  • Tbilisi Eager to Reap Diaspora Dollars

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    March 7 2012


    Georgia: Tbilisi Eager to Reap Diaspora Dollars

    March 7, 2012 - 2:09pm, by Molly Corso


    Always on the lookout for economic opportunity, officials in Georgia
    are trying to encourage members of the country's far-flung Diaspora to
    organize, and bring their skills and cash back home.

    Tbilisi's challenge may seem clear, but it isn't straightforward.
    Georgians are famed for their close ties with family and friends, yet
    analysts believe their natural gift for networking falters when they
    emigrate abroad.

    While there is no firm data on the number of Georgians living abroad,
    the government estimates that around 1.5 million Georgians have left
    the country since 1991, and believes there are around 3 million
    members of the `historic' Diaspora now living in Turkey, Iran and
    Azerbaijan. The historic Diaspora comprises those who emigrated before
    the Soviet era.

    If the government projections are accurate, the overall number of
    Diaspora members may approach Georgia's 2011 population of roughly
    4.47 million. Although no data exists on the specific amount of money
    sent home by Diaspora members, remittances to Georgia in 2011 were an
    eye-popping $1.26 billion - roughly 33 percent of projected tax
    revenues for 2012.

    Tapping into the Diaspora's financial muscle requires organization,
    and, for the most part, Georgian emigrants who build new lives abroad
    do so on their own, and not with the help of support groups.

    The government hopes that new passport-style identity cards,
    introduced on March 1, will help foster a greater sense of community.
    The card allows the holder to enter Georgia without a visa, have
    access to government scholarships for Georgian public schools and
    universities and join national sports teams. Any person with ties to
    Georgia through birth, ancestors going as far back as five
    generations, or marriage can apply for the card. In addition to the
    card, the government is offering a variety of cultural enrichment
    programs, including summer camps for children, folk dance and singing
    groups, plus schools in 50 Diaspora communities that offer lessons in
    Georgian language, history, geography and literature.

    First Deputy Minister for Diaspora Issues Irakli Nadiriadze believes
    the identity cards and cultural programs could help emigrants form
    `stronger' Diaspora communities with solid bonds to their homeland.

    `It is possible that [the Georgian Diaspora] will be more active [once
    they receive this card],' Nadiriadze asserted.

    The deputy minister added that Tbilisi is not `reinventing the wheel.'
    Government agencies, he said, have carefully studied policies in
    Armenia, India and other countries with large Diasporas to see what
    techniques are used to maintain and strengthen Diaspora ties to the
    homeland.

    The role of Diaspora Indians - at 25 million, the world's
    second-largest Diaspora community after the Chinese, according to the
    United Nations Development Programme -- stood out by their practice of
    `helping economically, investing and visiting their country,'
    Nadiradze said. Armenia, renowned for the influence of Armenian
    Diaspora organizations, was a model for involving the Diaspora with
    events taking place at home, he said.

    Georgian sociologists and political scientists who specialize in
    migration issues are skeptical that government policies can quickly
    build a more unified Georgian Diaspora.

    Many Georgian emigrants are more focused on their immediate needs --
    sending money home `to fight for their survival and their families'
    survival' and maintaining ties with those relatives -- than on joining
    forces with Georgians they do not know to help each other, commented
    Tbilisi State University sociologist Iago Kachkachishvili, who
    researched US-based Georgian immigrants from 2000 to 2003.

    Koba Turmanidze, country director for the Caucasus Research Resources
    Center (CRRC), agreed that Georgians are `notorious' for not being
    `very helpful' to each other abroad. In part, he believes, that is
    because of a desire to avoid giving the impression that they left
    Georgia to escape poverty -- a sensitive point in Georgia's highly
    status-conscious society.

    `Georgians used to sometimes avoid meeting other Georgians aboard
    because all this migration was caused mainly by poverty and economic
    hardship. And someone who managed to pull himself or herself out of
    that economic poverty abroad does not want to risk that status by
    helping other poor people from his or her country,' Turmanidze said.

    A 2010 CRRC survey demonstrated a sharp difference in attitudes toward
    venturing abroad between Georgia and Armenia. Out of 2,089 Georgian
    households questioned in the survey, just 7 percent of Georgian
    respondents said they would leave the country permanently if they
    could, compared to 29 percent of the 1,922 Armenian respondents about
    Armenia.

    Georgian émigré Mamuka Tsereteli, director of the America-Georgia
    Business Council in Washington, DC, doubts whether identity cards will
    play a role in building a more active Diaspora community. While
    greater numbers of Georgians are going legally to the United States,
    the ones working without proper documentation still `do not want to
    lead public lives,' and would shy away from the new Diaspora identity
    cards, added Tsereteli, who came to the United States 17 years ago.

    The Diaspora Ministry's Nadiriadze hopes that, in the end, love for
    the homeland will triumph over such concerns for most of the Georgian
    Diaspora. `It is not just about benefits,' he said. `There is also a
    sentimental moment . . . we believe that they will be highly honored
    to have this document.'

    Editor's note: Molly Corso is a freelance journalist who also works as
    editor of Investor.ge, a monthly publication by the American Chamber
    of Commerce in Georgia.

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