Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Latova N.V. Migration Attitudes and Preferences of Russian Specialists in the Context of the Human Capital Concept



Latova N.V. Migration Attitudes and Preferences of Russian Specialists in the Context of the Human Capital Concept // Monitoring of Public Opinion: Economic and Social Changes. 2021. No. 4. P. 429–450.
ISSN 2219-5467
DOI 10.14515/monitoring.2021.4.1692
ÐÈÍÖ: https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=47370181

Posted on site: 03.01.22

Òåêñò ñòàòüè íà ñàéòå æóðíàëà URL: https://www.monitoringjournal.ru/index.php/monitoring/article/view/1692/1577 (äàòà îáðàùåíèÿ 03.01.2022)


Abstract

Based on the materials of the all­Russian survey conducted in 2017, the article analyzes the migration attitudes and preferences of Russian specialists, which affect their human capital and the potential for national economic development. We conclude that the migration motivation of spe­cialists in Russia works to reduce the “skills mismatch”. However, the spe­cialists' attitudes toward destinations of migration, on the contrary, lead to a deepening of the “gap”. Moreover, the second trend is much stronger in its consequences than the first one. The capital­centric model of the country's socio­economic development leads to a unidirectional (centrifugal) in­country flow of migrants­specialists. They are not appealed by options of moving to settle­ments different than a large regional center. Such kind of migration is one of the reasons for the decrease in the real migration flow of Russian specialists. As a result, all the advantages of specialists noted in Western scientific literature (bet­ter preparedness for migration, wider ter­ritorial coverage in search of a suitable place, better knowledge of technologies for effective job selection), in Russian re­ality, give them small odds. In general, in contemporary Russia, the migration flow of specialists can increase the return on the previously received human capital at the individual level (with the option of moving to metropolitan cities). However, this is likely to happen at the expense of further deepening labor market imbal­ances at the national level.