“We’re suffering a huge brain drain,” Kamal Hamdan, head of the Lebanese Centre of Research and Studies, told IRIN.
“Those who have the brains take their diplomas and leave. They are the young people who would go on to be middle executives and entrepreneurs. In the long term, their absence means we may face a serious shortage of policy developers and managers.”
A poll published in April conducted by Information International, an independent Beirut-based research centre, found that 30 percent of Lebanese - nearly one in three people - wanted to emigrate abroad, and 60 percent in the 18-25 age bracket. The poll also found that nearly 12 percent of undergraduates want to emigrate, along with over 15 percent of professionals.
However, economist Elie Yachoui, board member of the National Council of Scientific Research in Lebanon, estimated that over the past two years more than 50 percent of graduates had left Lebanon.
More on Lebanon's economy |
Farmers seek government help to escape downward spiral of debt |
Lebanon is home to just under four million citizens, but some 16 million people of Lebanese descent live abroad, the largest communities being in South America, West Africa, the USA, Canada and Australia.
Pessimism
Abdo Asmar is 24, and has been trying to leave Lebanon for years, without any success. He has found work as a security guard for a private company, in what he says is “a flourishing career in Lebanon, given the circumstances”.
Lebanon has been plagued by a recently re-emerged campaign of bombings, as well as political assassinations, since the murder of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in February 2005.
Those who have the brains take their diplomas and leave. They are the young people who would go on to be middle executives and entrepreneurs. |
“I received a job offer to work as a security officer in the Green Zone in Baghdad, for 10 times the salary I’m paid now,” he said. “Why would I bother to stay? If I’m going to die anyway, I’d rather die rich.”
Hadi Sabaa, 27, is equally pessimistic about the future of his country, even though he has a steady job on a local newspaper. Like many other journalism graduates, he’s trying to leave for Dubai, “where reporters are appreciated, respected, and decently paid”. “There at least,” he said, “I will not have to worry about where my children are at the time of the next explosion.”
“Taboo”
Political sensitivities are hampering efforts to record data on actual numbers of émigrés.
We haven’t been allowed to conduct serious research for over 16 years now, because in Lebanon, this subject is taboo, due to official fear of revealing the new confessional and religious make-up of the population. |
“We haven’t been allowed to conduct serious research for over 16 years now, because in Lebanon, this subject is taboo, due to official fear of revealing the new confessional and religious make-up of the population,” said Hamdan, whose own three children have left and have no plans to return.
Hamdan accused successive governments of “deliberately neglecting the need for an organised database, so that we don’t know who left and who came back”.
The money trail
The minimum state wage in Lebanon is less than US$300 per month and has not changed since 1996.
A report issued by the World Bank in May 2007 found nearly 26 percent of the country's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), worth around $5.6 billion, comes from emigrants, based on a calculation of the balance of payments for 2006.
The report also showed 45 percent of these transactions come from the 400,000 Lebanese residing in Gulf States, in particular those living in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait.
Economist Elie Yachoui, blamed the high rates of brain drain on “bad policies undertaken by successive governments, which failed to produce economic growth as the public debt skyrocketed”.
He told IRIN that, in addition to the current deteriorating security, the country’s huge indebtedness also stands in the way of achieving economic growth.
Photo: Emmanuel Dunseath/IRIN |
An empty cafe in the heart of Beirut. The Israel-Hezbollah war of last summer drove many Lebanese to emigrate |
Billions of dollars pledged to Lebanon at the Paris III international donor conference in January will go simply to service pubic debt repayments, and they have mostly yet to be approved because of the current political stalemate that has seen parliament closed all year.
“Lebanon has three sources of revenue,” said Yachoui. “One is natural, the second monetary, and the third - the most important- is our human resources. When this disappears, we lose the capability of managing the first two.”
For some, though, even successful economic reforms and a better salary would not entice them to stay.
“I don’t care if they fix the situation now or ever,” said journalist Hadi Sabaa. “What good will economic reform do me if on my way to buy some bread a car bomb blows me away?”
mc/hm/ds/cb
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions