Youth in Turkey report: 73 percent want to live abroad

Germany-based Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS) Association has published its "Turkey Youth 2021 report" in Turkish and German.
The newly published data about the attitudes, opinions, expectations, preferences and composition of young people in Turkey have shown "a pessimistic outlook for a dissatisfied and frustrated youth."
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung Turkey conducted the research assessing and analyzing the social and political attitudes and opinions of the youth in a representative study. The research has shed light on the perception of the youth in Turkey on politics, participation, activism and international politics, as well as analyzes their cultural, religious, and social preferences.
The target population of the KAS research is the individuals between 18-25 years old. According to the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) there are nearly 7 million people in this age group in Turkey.
According to the research, while nearly 73 percent of the youth want to live abroad if they have the chance, 48 percent of them say that "they do not trust the President at all". Taken together with the ones who say "I don't trust him", the latter rate adds up to 58.5 percent.
While the full English version of the report is expected to be released in March, the KAS has shared the following highlights from the report:
'A pessimistic outlook on future'
"The Turkish youth is increasingly speaking out and articulating their interests and demands not only among themselves, but also increasingly to the broader society. The majority of young people in Turkey tend to have a pessimistic outlook on the future of Turkey. 62.8 percent of the respondents stated that they do not see the future of Turkey well.Those who stated that they are completely hopeless about the future of Turkey is 35.2 percent."The Turkish youth has an especially pessimistic outlook towards the economic situation and their own life mainly focused on the cost of living, inflation and the fear of a potential economic collapse. "A significant majority of the respondents (72.9 percent) therefore stated that they would like to live in another country if given the opportunity. "Politicians, political parties and journalists are not trusted (only 3.7 percent, 4.4 percent and 6.9 percent) while scientists (70.3 percent) and the military (61.8 percent) still tend to be perceived as trusted institutions for the majority of the respondents. "There is little trust in the country's basic institutional structures like the presidency (19,4 percent) and the justice system (11,9 percent).