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Donatas Burneika, head of the Institute of Public Geography and Demography of the Lithuanian Center for Social Research, says that today our country faces low birth rates, has very few active youth and it can be difficult to compensate for emigration losses with the help of incoming workers from third countries.
Although Ž. Mauricas believes that the wave of massive emigration, which was in 2008, should not be accompanied by further liberalization of world economies, if nothing is done, the country could become one of the peripheral countries of the European Union, where it has produced the brain drain. continued for several decades.
“The future of Lithuania will depend on migration trends in the coming decades,” he says.
Leave again rather than return
According to data from the Lithuanian Department of Statistics, for the third consecutive month, Lithuania has more developing people than arrivals.
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