erstestiftung.org 
<http://www.erstestiftung.org/en/kosovos-demographic-destiny/>  


Kosovo's demographic destiny – ERSTE Stiftung


Tim Judah

12-15 minutes

  _____  

Facts 


Europe’s youngest state is not immune to the ageing and depopulation hollowing 
out societies across the Balkans. 


Kosovo may be Europe’s newest state but whoever has been in charge has been 
collecting data for as long as anyone has had the power to collect taxes.

A 1330 charter of the Serbian Orthodox Visoki Dečani monastery in western 
Kosovo records the number of settlements and households around it and in what 
is now northern Albania. This appears to show that the vast majority of the 
people there were Serbs. Not so, argue some Albanian historians who say Serbian 
officials were “slavicizing” Albanian names in order to assimilate them.

In Kosovo, history has always been war by other means and so it is easier to 
find detailed analyses of how many Serbs and Albanians lived in Kosovo at any 
one time in centuries past than it is find to find analyses of numbers, trends 
and hence the needs of people, rather than Serbs, Albanians and others, who 
live in Kosovo today. Statistics have been marshalled or massaged to support 
one side or another, or simply guessed at — all of which makes cogent analysis 
of Kosovo demographics far more difficult than anywhere else in the Western 
Balkans.

Kosovo's change in population. Infographic: © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy 

For example, according to Eurostat, the EU’s statistical agency, which takes 
its data from ASK, the Kosovo Agency of Statistics, in 2010 Kosovo’s resident 
population was 2.2 million but in 2011 it was 1.79 million. So did more than 
400,000 people suddenly die or emigrate? Of course not. The explanation behind 
this statistical cliff helps us understand why politics has made it so hard to 
know how many people live in Kosovo.

The explanation behind the country’s statistical cliff helps us understand why 
politics has made it so hard to know how many people live in Kosovo.

In 1981, the Yugoslav census recorded a total population of 1.58 million, of 
whom 77.4 per cent were Albanians and 14.9 per cent Serbs and Montenegrins. By 
the time of the next census in 1991, Serbian leader Slobodan Milošević had 
abolished Kosovo’s autonomy and Albanians boycotted the census, meaning that 
the Yugoslav Federal Statistical Institute had to estimate their numbers. It 
concluded that there were now 1.97 million people in Kosovo, of whom 82.2 per 
cent were Albanians.

In fact, the number actually in Kosovo was less because Yugoslav census figures 
included those working abroad and their families. According to an estimate the 
Institute made in 1989, there were actually only some 1.87 million resident in 
Kosovo.

However, during the 1990s it was common to read that Kosovo’s population was at 
least two million. When the first post-war census was taken in 2011, it was 
discovered that Kosovo’s population was far less than anyone thought, which 
accounts for the jolting drop in the Eurostat figures.

Infographic: © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy 

A major reason for the error was a fall in the fertility rate, which throughout 
the Yugoslav period had been extremely high. In 1950, women had an average of 
7.6 children. By 1981, that had dropped to 4.58. By 1991, it was 3.58 and 
finally in 2015 it dipped below the replacement rate to 2.00 where it remained 
in 2018. Until the 2011 census, though, projections were made using higher than 
actual fertility rates.

There were also no accurate statistics on how many people had left, either to 
Serbia in the case of Serbs or to the rest of the world in the case of Kosovo 
Albanians. While the 2011 census was the first to give as close to a reliable 
picture of the Kosovo population since 1981 now Kosovo Serbs boycotted, or the 
census was not held in the four Serb-controlled municipalities of the north. So 
ASK had to estimate their numbers.

Today the websites for the four predominantly Serb-populated northern 
municipalities put their total population at 70,430 but if we exclude students, 
especially from other parts of Serbia, this number may be exaggerated for 
political reasons.

Kosovo’s Serb population is ageing fast and shrinking. There are not enough job 
opportunities for the general population and hence even fewer for Kosovo Serbs, 
a large proportion of whom do not speak Albanian.

Over the last year, the Serbian and Kosovo presidents have toyed with the idea 
of an exchange of territory and people, by which the north of Kosovo would be 
exchanged for the majority ethnic Albanian-inhabited Presevo Valley in southern 
Serbia (whose Albanians likewise boycotted the last Serbian census). One 
problem from the Serbian perspective is that if the exchange happens, the 
majority of Kosovo Serbs would be left in the south — unless the municipality 
figures were correct. However, evidence from Serbian sources suggests it is not.

School enrolment and Serbian Orthodox Church figures point to a resident Kosovo 
Serb population of about 100,000, with about 40 per cent living in the north 
and the rest in the south. If the suspicion that north Kosovo population 
figures have been put to the service of political ends is correct, it would not 
be the first time in recent history.

During the 1980s, when the Albanian birth rate was extremely high, this was an 
issue that was pressed into service by Serbian political forces who argued that 
Kosovo Albanians were deliberately having large families in order to make 
Kosovo theirs — rather than the fact that poor societies in which most women do 
not work tend to have a high birth rate. Still, the argument was potent and it 
helped Milošević come to power — a turning point leading to the destruction of 
Yugoslavia.

At the same time, large families needed land and houses and this population 
pressure meant that large numbers of Serbs sold theirs to Albanians and left 
for Serbia where the money could buy them far more than they had had in Kosovo.

In the aftermath of the war in 1999, when Serbs fled ethnic cleansing, Serbian 
officials claimed that around 220,000 Serbs had come to Serbia, which would 
mean more than actually lived there, according to the 1991 census in which 
Serbs and Montenegrins participated and which recorded 215,346 of them plus 
42,806 Roma, many of whom also suffered at that time. In fact, close analysis 
by the European Stability Initiative think tank found that the true figure of 
those who had fled was about 65,000.

At the time, UN agencies used Serbian figures, giving them credibility. Today, 
Kosovo’s Serb population is ageing fast and shrinking. There are not enough job 
opportunities for the general population and hence even fewer for Kosovo Serbs, 
a large proportion of whom do not speak Albanian.

Infographic: © Ewelina Karpowiak / Klawe Rzeczy 

Across the Balkans, the trends point to ageing and shrinking societies from 
which the young and skilled are emigrating in large numbers. Today, thanks to 
its population explosion, especially in the 1980s, Kosovo has the youngest 
population in Europe. But now that its birth rate has dipped below the 
replacement level, and thanks to emigration, Kosovo’s Albanian and hence entire 
population has begun to age and shrink too.

According to ASK analysis, Kosovo’s population could fall to 1.49 million by 
2061. In 2017, 25 per cent of the population was 14 years old or below and 
eight per cent was 65 years old or above. By 2061, there may be just 13 per 
cent in the youngest age bracket but 27 per cent in the older one. The question 
of emigration is a vexed and politicised one. It is also one that is hard to 
enumerate because of a lack of data.

Today, thanks to its population explosion, especially in the 1980s, Kosovo has 
the youngest population in Europe.

In the Yugoslav period, there were three main flows of emigration: Kosovo 
Albanians and Serbs who went to work abroad as so-called gastarbeiters, Kosovo 
Serbs who went to Serbia and Kosovo Albanians who went to other parts of 
Yugoslavia. The destruction of Yugoslavia closed off legal emigration apart 
from those seeking asylum. In the period 2013-16, the number of economically 
motivated asylum applications in the EU from Kosovars plus those detected 
illegally in EU states was a massive 229,005.


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.

Now, a new chapter is opening, which is that while people from Kosovo remain 
without visa-free travel to the Schengen zone, countries like Germany and 
Croatia have begun to give work permits to them in ways and numbers that they 
did not before.

Today, while we can rely on the statistics of foreign countries to number 
Kosovo citizens in them, we can only guess at the size of the diaspora, though 
it is commonly said to be around 700,000 in Europe, with a small number in 
North America and elsewhere.

That figure only refers to Kosovo Albanians though, and while the number of 
Kosovo Serbs outside of Kosovo and Serbia will be small, the number of those 
born in Kosovo and their children in Serbia would not be.

Anyone who was born in Kosovo or has one parent who is registered as a citizen 
can claim Kosovo citizenship and vote.

In 2018, the number of people from Kosovo in Switzerland was 111,826, in 
Germany 218,150 and in Austria 25,025. In the period 2010-18, the number of 
people from Kosovo who received Swiss citizenship was 25,311 but in the years 
before that large numbers who were citizens of Yugoslavia or Serbia also 
received it and it is impossible to tell from those figures who was from Kosovo 
or who was a Serb or Albanian. Germany only began recording naturalisations of 
people from Kosovo from 2008, and from then to 2018, the total number is 33,966.

Given these numbers, it is quite possible that the total diaspora in Europe, 
including children with foreign citizenships, is about double the recorded 
numbers of Kosovo citizens abroad, so indeed about 700,000 people. According to 
the International Monetary Fund, diaspora remittances represented 11.8 per cent 
of gross domestic product in 2018. The median age in Kosovo is 29.06, while in 
Albania it is 36.07 and Serbia it is 43.

Kosovo should benefit far more than it does from its young population but the 
lack of jobs and opportunities remain an obstacle to growth and a spur to 
emigration. The trends are clear though. Kosovo is years — a couple of decades 
even — behind the rest of the Balkans when it comes to ageing and population 
shrinkage, but unless something changes, it is moving in exactly the same 
direction as its neighbours.

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

First published on 7 November 2019 on Reportingdemocracy.org 
<https://balkaninsight.com/2019/11/07/kosovos-demographic-destiny-looks-eerily-familiar/>
 , 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/archive/a-region-in-critical-demographic-decline>
  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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