Latvia’s population declines as birth rate slips, emigration rises

Another year, another drop in population: Latvia’s Central Statistical Bureau has reported that the country experienced a net loss in residents during 2009, dropping to a total count of 2.248 million.

Overall, the country lost 12,900 in population, the bureau announced May 27. Marriages fell significantly compared to 2008, while men and women are waiting longer to get married and, if they have children, are having fewer. Emigration from Latvia also contributed to the decline in population.

More people died than were born in Latvia last year, contributing to a decline of 8,200 in population. Long-term migration added another net loss of 4,700, according to data compiled by the bureau.

For the second year in a row, the number of marriages dropped. A total of 9,925 marriages were registered in 2009, compared to 12,946 in 2008, a decrease of 23 percent. In 2007, Latvia saw 15,486 marriages.

Residents of Latvia are continuing to wait longer to get married.

“Since 2000 the age of the first marriage has grown by more than two years,” according to a press release from the statistical bureau. The average age of men the first time they marry rose to 29 last year, while for women the average age is 27.

At the same time, married couples appear to be holding together more. The number of divorces last year totaled 5,099, compared to 6,214 in 2008—a drop of 18 percent.

The number of births dipped 10 percent last year to a total of 21,677. After two years of gains, Latvia’s fertility rate slipped to 1.32 in 2009.

However, people in Latvia are living a bit longer. The total number of deaths last year was 29,897, or a drop of 3.6 percent from 2008, according to the bureau. As a result, the average life expectancy rose to 68.3 years for men and 78.1 years for women.

The highest birth rates were recorded in Rīga and its environs, while the lowest was in Latgale. However, the death rate was highest in Latgale and lowest in Rīga’s environs.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Financial regulator shuts VEF banka

Latvia’s banking regulator has shut down the country’s smallest bank, Rīga-based VEF banka, noting that shareholders were not following the law on credit institutions. Five years ago, the U.S. government singled out VEF banka and another institution over money laundering.

The Financial and Capital Market Commission (Finanšu un kapitāla tirgus komisija, or FKTK) announced May 26 that it has annulled VEF banka’s license and ordered that the bank stop all financial operations.

However, the head of the commission said its decision has nothing to do with the bank’s financial condition.

“The reason for annulling the license is not related to the bank’s insolvency,” FKTK Head of Office Anna Dravniece said in a press release.

The bank’s shareholders, according to the FKTK announcement, for some time have not had the commission’s permission to increase their holdings in the bank and do not have a say in the bank’s operation.

As of May 5 the bank had LVL 4.9 million in assets and 170 depositors, only 20 of whom had account balances greater than LVL 1,000. The FKTK has determined that the bank has enough financial resources to cover guaranteed settlements to depositors and that the state’s deposit insurance fund will not be needed. Depositors are guaranteed no more than EUR 50,000 each in settlements.

In their 2009 annual report, VEF banka officials said the financial institution was still recovering from its 2005 designation by the U.S. Treasury Department as a “primary money laundering concern” under a provision of the USA PATRIOT Act. The Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network in 2006 banned American banks from dealing with VEF banka and with Rīga-based Multibanka.

“These two Latvian banks represent a danger to the international community because they facilitate the placement and movement of dirty money in the global financial system,” a Treasury Department official said in a 2005 statement.

VEF banka, which began operation in 1992, was singled out because of concerns about lax controls against money laundering and because less than 20 percent of the bank’s clients were Latvian residents.

Despite its efforts in curbing money laundering, as well as changes in its major shareholders, the Treasury Department has not lifted its sanctions, VEF banka officials wrote in the annual report. They added that removing the restriction was one of their goals for 2010.

VEF banka officials did not have an immediate comment on the FKTK decision to close the institution.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Latvia ranks No. 2 in broadband speeds

Perhaps only geeks will find this interesting, but it’s worth noting nonetheless: Latvia has the second-fastest broadband download speeds in the world, according to the U.S.-based diagnostics company Ookla.

Ookla runs Speedtest.net, a service that allows consumers to test the speed of their Internet connections. Tests run during the past 30 days, Speedtest.net reported May 24, show that consumers in South Korea have the fastest download speeds, while Latvia ranks No. 2.

South Koreans on average experience a download speed of 34.14 Mbps (megabits per second), while Latvians get 24.29 Mbps.

The rest of the Top 10 includes Moldova, Japan, Sweden, Romania, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Portugal.

Estonia came in No. 19. The United States is 26th and Russia is 28th.

On a city-by-city basis, Speedtest.net found the Seoul ranked No. 1 with an average download speed of 34.66 Mbps. Rīga ranked No. 2 with a speed of 27.90 Mbps. Kaunas, Lithuania’s second-largest city, ranked No. 10 with a speed of 17.48 Mbps.

Upload tests showed South Korea at No. 1 and Latvia at No. 2. Lithuania ranked No. 4 and Russia was No. 10.

However, when comparing the quality of broadband connections, a different picture emerges. In that index, Romania ranks No. 1, Russia is No. 2 and Portugal is No. 3. The United States ranks ninth.

At least 10,000 “packet tests” had to have been run for countries to be listed in the Top Ten rankings.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.