Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 15 – Statistics on
the number of people immigrating to Kazakhstan are accurate because it is
impossible to live in the country without being registered in various ways by the
state, those on the number of people leaving are vastly understated because
people can leave but retain their Kazakhstan citizenship even if they take a
second, Nurtay Mustafayev says.
Moreover, the Kazakh historian tells
Saule Isabayeva of Central Asian Monitor, even the number officially departing
is rising again, exceeds the number of new arrivals, and the imbalance in favor
of emigration is likely to increase dramatically in the years ahead (amonitor.kz/33969-novaya-volna-emigraciya-v-kazahstan-oni-uzhe-ne-vernutsya.html).
And while the Kazakh historian does not
discuss this possibility, his arguments are worth attending to because they
likely reflect the situation in other post-Soviet states where few can live in
any country without being registered in some way but many can move abroad
without being counted.
A major reason for the undercount of
emigration, Mustafayev says, is that while Kazakhstan law prohibits dual
citizenship, many Kazakhs who move abroad in fact take on new citizenship but
do not give up their original one, not because they intend to come back but simply
for the convenience of having two travel documents.
“Emigration of Kazakhstan residents to
the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and the countries of Western Europe is almost
always ‘a one-way ticket,’” he says. “The overwhelming majority of them do not
return to the motherland and do not make any contribution to its ‘flourishing.’
Cases of return are rare.”
A major reason people leave but don’t
come back is that headhunter firms and governments are engaged in a serious
competition for talented individuals and because many Kazakhs remain convinced that
their life chances are better in a variety of foreign countries than in their
own, something the government has done little to change.
Moscow has been particularly active
in attracting young Kazakhs by offering them scholarships to Russian
universities and a rapid path to citizenship in that country. There
are more than 70,000 Kazakhs studying in Russian higher schools, the largest group
of foreign nationality in that country, larger even than those from China,
according to official data (kursiv.kz/news/obrazovanie/2019-06/skolko-kazakhstanskikh-studentov-uekhali-v-rossiyu).
Because of its own demographic
problems, Russia needs educated young people who know its language and culture.
Many from Kazakhstan fill that bill, and so Moscow wants to attract them to
study and work in the Russian Federation – and not unimportantly to give birth
to more new Russians.
“To be sure, not all of our students
take Russian citizenship,” Mustafayev says. “Part of them, mostly of Kazakh
nationality who have the chance for self-realization in Kazakhstan, do return.
But even this is very useful for Russia because the experience of instruction
in Russia is one of the most effective forms of ‘soft power.’”
Both because of Russian efforts and
because of the attractiveness of various countries as places to live and work,
the historian says, the number of people
leaving Kazakhstan has been rising, up from 29,722 in 2012 to 41,868 in
2018, while the number coming to settle
in the country has fallen over the same period from 28,296 to 12,747.
“In my view,” the historian
concludes, “we have still not passed the peak of the current way of emigration.” That is likely years ahead – and the
government needs to have good figures about emigration in order to develop policies
that reduce the outflow of people in general and the brain drain in particular.
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