As global migration trends surge in the 21st century, the small nation of Georgia—perched at the crossroads of Europe and Asia—has emerged as a critical case study. With nearly one in four citizens now living abroad, Georgia is grappling with the dual-edged consequences of population outflow: vital remittances on one hand, and a draining loss of human capital on the other.
Yet migration does not have to remain Georgia’s Achilles’ heel. With bold reform and strategic investment, it can become the country’s greatest asset.
A Historic Legacy of Movement
Migration is not new for Georgia. Over the centuries, its people have been forced to move due to imperial conquests, economic crises, and political upheaval—from the Roman invasions to Stalinist deportations and the more recent post-Soviet conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. These waves have created a far-flung and resilient Georgian diaspora, particularly in Russia, Europe, and North America.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, migration surged as Georgia faced civil unrest, economic freefall, and limited prospects for younger generations. Today, more than one million Georgians reside abroad, many of them highly educated professionals.
The Cost of Human Flight
This migration has generated $2 billion annually in remittances—about 13% of Georgia’s GDP—providing lifelines to thousands of households. But it comes at a steep price: brain drain, rural depopulation, an aging demographic, and a workforce ill-equipped to power long-term growth.
Skilled doctors, engineers, and academics leave in search of better pay and stability. Talented students pursue degrees abroad—and often don’t return. The country’s economic and political volatility, combined with limited job opportunities, continues to push its best and brightest overseas.
What’s Driving Georgians to Leave?
A recent analysis reveals five dominant push factors:
Economic instability: Persistent unemployment, low wages, and weak business ecosystems, especially in rural areas.
Political uncertainty: Lingering effects of past conflicts, weak democratic institutions, and a lack of trust in public governance.
Educational migration: Students seek globally competitive degrees and salaries, particularly in tech, medicine, and law.
Social networks abroad: Established diaspora communities ease the burden of relocation and integration.
EU visa liberalization: Since 2017, easier travel has enabled a broader wave of economic migrants, especially younger workers.
The Solutions: Building a Country Worth Staying In
Georgia has an opportunity to reverse this trend—not by restricting migration, but by transforming the reasons people leave. A national strategy must focus on making Georgia a country that citizens choose to stay in and return to.
1. Reboot the Economy
Target Growth Sectors: Invest in tech, tourism, renewable energy, and agribusiness—industries that can scale and absorb talent.
Support Entrepreneurs: Simplify regulations, expand microfinance programs, and create startup incubators to cultivate local innovation.
Increase Wages: Set fair minimum wage standards and incentivize businesses to retain high-skilled labor.
2. Educate and Retain Talent
Modernize Education: Align university curricula with global labor demands and increase funding to STEM fields.
Incentivize Return: Offer financial packages, job placements, and fast-track certifications to Georgians returning with foreign education.
3. Strengthen Governance
Combat Corruption: Transparent institutions are key to public trust. Anti-corruption measures must be enforced at all levels.
Promote Political Stability: Long-term peace, particularly in conflict-affected regions, is essential to reversing displacement and migration.
4. Develop Rural Regions
Infrastructure Investments: Improve roads, healthcare, digital access, and schools to stem internal displacement.
Decentralize Opportunity: Empower municipalities to create local growth plans and attract investment.
5. Leverage the Diaspora
Engage Globally: Mobilize the Georgian diaspora to invest in local businesses, mentor young professionals, and act as cultural ambassadors.
Create Circular Migration Programs: Encourage temporary migration that allows Georgians to gain skills abroad and bring them back home.
A Path Forward: Migration as a Catalyst for Growth
If managed strategically, migration can serve as a developmental tool rather than a national drain. Countries such as Ireland and South Korea have successfully reversed migration trends by investing in education, economic modernization, and diaspora engagement. Georgia can follow suit.
To do so, it must shift its focus from crisis response to long-term planning. That means not just keeping people in Georgia, but offering them compelling reasons to build their futures there.
Georgia’s story is not one of loss—it is one of potential. Migration has expanded the nation’s global footprint, built invaluable networks, and embedded the Georgian spirit across continents. The next chapter must be about using that diaspora power, combined with sound domestic reform, to turn the tide.
If Georgia can build a nation that offers opportunity, dignity, and stability, its greatest export—its people—might just become its greatest return.