06:55 02/07/2015
Athens - What does the future look like for young people in
crisis-hit Greece, where years of hardship and sky-high unemployment
were followed this week by bank closures? The answer: self-imposed
exile.
"I don't see a future in Greece," sighs Dani Iordake. The
21-year-old, who proudly sports self-styled tattoos on his arms, was
forced to drop out of university to help his mother pay the bills.
"It's a beautiful country... [but] I couldn't imagine living here and struggling every day," he said.
With
youth unemployment at nearly 50% and a breakdown in negotiations with
Greece's international creditors heralding further financial woes, many
of Iordake's contemporaries are packing their bags.
Over
200 000 Greeks have quit the country since the financial crisis began
in 2010, according to Endeavor Greece, a local chapter of an
entrepreneurial promotional group. They have been driven away by a
dearth of jobs, pitiful wages, endemic corruption and lack of
meritocracy.
Thirty-two year old Christos Pennos left in 2013
because of a scarcity of opportunities in the scientific field, and
managed to snap up a post as a university researcher in Norway.
"My
brother lives in Spain, my best friend in Germany. I have a lot of
friends in Britain, Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands, Belgium, France and
even in Poland," he said.
At first he had only planned to spend
two or three years in Norway, but now believes he'll stay longer -
though he admits "I really miss my friends and family, and most of all
the Greek sun and Greek food".
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and
his radical left Syriza party were elected on the promise to help those
worst hit by years of austerity, but instead have been forced to impose
capital controls and close banks.
'Situation is awful'
Friends
Marilena and Josie, 22 and 33, catch up over a beer and falafel
sandwich, which they eat on a bench in the street while they discuss
their future.
As a massage therapist, Josie cannot find full-time
work and has been forced in the past to take baby-sitting and cleaning
jobs to make ends meet.
"Before the crisis, I was paid $1 440 net. Today, I don't get even half that, gross."
Her
boyfriend, a Syrian refugee she met while volunteering for a migrants
association, is currently in the Netherlands and she's thinking of going
to live with him.
Marilena may also pack up and head to Germany,
where her brother lives. He signed up with the military there and earns a
2 000-euro salary, with practically no expenses to pay, she said.
The decision to leave her homeland is not one she will take lightly, however. "It's an option, not a must."
Unemployed
civil engineer Giannis Grigoriou does not have the luxury of waiting
the crisis out, and is planning to immigrate to an Arab country because
he thinks he'll have more luck finding work.
"The situation is
awful. Had I known this four to five years ago I would have studied to
be a chef or hairdresser, which have more appeal in this country," he
said.
Emigration increasing
Greek
emigration, particularly among the young, "is not a new phenomenon, but
it increased considerably during the crisis," said Lois Labrianidis,
economic geography professor at Thessaloniki University.
Labrianidis
has been called in to help at the economy ministry, and wants more done
to boost investments and develop high-value industries to encourage
young graduates to stay in Greece.
He hopes the government will be
able to renegotiate with the country's creditors, saying: "If we don't
have to pay more money, we'll have more money to put in the economy".
"These days are crucial for Greece, but especially for the young," he said.
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