erstestiftung.org <http://www.erstestiftung.org/en/too-late/>  


'Too late' – ERSTE Stiftung


Tim Judah

8-9 minutes

  _____  

Facts 


Serbia's demographic disaster can no longer be halted. 


Serbia is set to lose almost a quarter of its population by 2050 as the young 
and the skilled emigrate in search of work.

Vladimir Nikitović, a demographer at Belgrade’s Institute for Social Sciences, 
thinks of himself as an optimistic person — but not when it comes to Serbia’s 
population projections. “It’s too late!” he said. “It’s not [that it’s] too 
late now. It was too late even 20 years ago!”

Nikitović has been going over the demographic figures for Serbia and they make 
for grim reading. His predecessors, working in the same building as he works in 
today, had even warned Josip Broz Tito, Yugoslavia’s leader who died in 1980, 
what was happening. Serbia’s demographic decline has been clear to demographers 
at least since the 1970s. Then came the breakup of Yugoslavia and the wars of 
the 1990s, “and everything got worse”, Nikitović said.

Serbia’s population was 6.96 million at the beginning of 2019, according to the 
Serbian Statistical Office. The figure excludes Kosovo, although Serbia does 
not recognise its independence. In 2018, there were 63,975 live births and 
101,655 deaths so, disregarding how many actually left the country in this 
period, Serbia’s population declined by 37,680 people. That was the worst 
figure in a decade, in which the average population decline was 35,125 a year. 
In the dry language of the Statistical Office, the “natural increase rate” of 
Serbia’s population in the decade was -5.4 per cent. In plain language that is 
a decrease.

Infographic: © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy 

In the Yugoslav period what was happening in Serbia was unclear to 
non-specialists. The reason for this was that there were enormous regional 
variations across the country. Today, Serbian women give birth to an average of 
1.48 children, well below the 2.1 needed just to maintain a country’s 
population. But a low birth rate among Serbs is not new. Serbia, not including 
Kosovo, slipped under the replacement rate as early as 1956.

Infographic: © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy 

“We are one of the regions in Europe which was the first to face the end of the 
baby-boom period and it struck us heavily by the 1990s,” Nikitović said. Before 
the collapse of Yugoslavia, however, birth rates remained high in poorer 
regions and this served to mask what was happening in Serbia, where the 
fertility rate was also very different if Kosovo was included and where women 
had an average of 7.6 children in 1950 and 5.6 in 1972. But the birth rate was 
not the only reason why the drama of what is happening today in Serbia was not 
clear to most people.

 


EUROPE'S FUTURES


Europe is living through its most dramatic and challenging period since World 
War II. The European project is at stake and its liberal democracy is being 
challenged from both inside and outside. There is an urgent need from all 
quarters of state and non-state actors to address the burning problems, both to 
buttress what has been painstakingly achieved through the political peace 
project.

>From 2018 to 2021, each year six to eight leading European experts are taking 
>up engagement as Europe’s Futures <https://www.europesfutures.eu/>  fellows. 
>They create a platform of voices presenting ideas for action whose goal is to 
>reinforce and project forward a vision and reality of Europe. Europe’s Futures 
>is an endeavour based on in-depth research, concrete policy proposals, and 
>encounters with state and civil society actors, public opinion and media.

Another reason was that in the three censuses of 1971, 1981 and 1991, officials 
sought to massage the figures to mask the huge numbers who worked abroad due to 
a lack of work at home. Officially there were 7.82 million people in Serbia 
minus Kosovo in 1991.

In fact, that figure was boosted by 283,000 people who were not there. By this 
time, about 1 million Yugoslav citizens lived abroad as so-called gastarbeiters 
or their family so the population census for Yugoslavia and its constituent 
parts overstated population figures.

In 2002, Serbia reverted to the international norm of only counting those who 
actually lived in the country. Taking all this into account, Serbia’s 
population has shrunk by 8.42 per cent since the demise of Yugoslavia. The 
World Bank predicts that on current trends it will be 5.79 million by 2050, 
which would mean a 23.81 per cent decrease in the same period.

Not only does Serbia suffer from a low birth rate but its population is 
elderly. Serbia’s median age is 43 and the EU average is 42.6. However Serbia, 
unlike most Western countries, has no immigration to make up for lost workers. 
That is not to say no one is coming to live in the country at all. Net 
emigration is 15,000 to 20,000 a year. This means that while 40,000 to 50,000 
leave every year, 30,000 or so come back, Nikitović said.

While the returnees include those who only went abroad for a short period, they 
also include an average of some 10,000 to 15,000 pensioners a year, former 
gastarbeiters now retiring but whose children rarely come back with them. The 
wars of the 1990s also skewed figures. Serbs who came from Kosovo do not show 
up in the statistics as they were already citizens of Serbia but some 600,000 
refugees who came from Bosnia and Croatia do.

Infographic: © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy 

However, only 375,000 to 400,000 of the refugees stayed while others eventually 
went home or elsewhere, Nikitović said. But roughly the same number of people 
also left Serbia during the wars. The demographic effect was not favourable as 
it was mostly younger people who left Serbia while it was families and older 
people who arrived. The result was that “if you look at the age structure, it 
is worse than it was before the dissolution of the country”, Nikitović said.

As long as Serbia remains an unattractive country for potential immigrants, its 
population will continue to age and decline.

Serbia’s authorities are well aware of the demographic crisis, the labour 
shortages it is beginning to create and the ongoing problem an ever older 
population creates for the pension system. In 2021, according to the 
Statistical Office, Serbia will have more pensioners than working age people. 
Likewise, emigration of the young, the skilled and the hard-working is only set 
to worsen.

In the past it was EU accession that really opened the doors to the emigration 
of people of working age. Now Germany and other countries have relaxed the 
rules meaning that it is easier than ever for Serbs to work abroad legally. As 
long as Serbia remains an unattractive country for potential immigrants, its 
population will continue to age and decline, a prospect that also means that it 
makes it ever harder to catch up in terms of wealth and standards of living 
with Western countries, which means in turn that they remain as strong a magnet 
for immigration from Serbia as ever.

The opinions expressed are those of the author only and do not necessarily 
reflect the views of BIRN or ERSTE Foundation.

First published on 24 October 2020 on Reportingdemocracy.org 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2019/10/24/too-late-to-halt-serbias-demographic-disaster/>
  a journalistic platform run by the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network. 
The article was produced within the framework of the Europe’s Futures 
<https://www.europesfutures.eu/>  project.

This text is protected by copyright: © Tim Judah. If you are interested in 
republication, please contact the editorial team 
<http://www.erstestiftung.org/en/erste-foundation/imprint/> .
Copyright information on pictures and graphics are noted directly at the 
illustrations. Cover picture: Illustration © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy

 

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