The Gallup
polling company posed that question to about 1,000 people in each of 82
countries over the period of 2006 to 2008. The findings are surprising.

photo: NASA
Take, for example, two Western European countries
that are among the favorite destinations for migrants -- Britain and Germany.
Don't the people who already live there feel lucky to be where they are?
Not entirely. In both the United Kingdom and
Germany, 27 percent of the respondents said they would like to permanently move
somewhere else.
That's on the high side of responses for this
survey, in which half of the worldwide responses fell above 26 percent and half
below.
Ready To Leave
Or take France and Russia.
While France is world-famous for its standard of
living and creature comforts, 17 percent of its inhabitants say they are ready
to migrate. But Russia -- equally famous for its widening gap between the
wealthy and poor and for its harsh winters -- has exactly the same proportion of
people who say they are ready to move --17 percent.
Other former Soviet republics show a wide variety
of answers, both higher and lower than Russia.
Highest is Moldova, where 34 percent are ready to
migrate. That is followed by Azerbaijan at 28 percent, Georgia at 26 percent,
Ukraine at 25 percent, and Armenia at 23 percent.
Twenty percent of Belarusians and Kyrgyz want to
migrate. And between 19 and 20 percent of the inhabitants of the Baltic states
-- now EU members -- want the same.
But in Kazakhstan, just 13 percent would leave
home. And in Tajikistan, it is just 12 percent -- even though many Tajiks
regularly have to seek seasonal work in neighboring countries.
Elsewhere, the poll found 30 percent of the
respondents in Iran ready to migrate -- ranking the country just below Lebanon
and just above Chad.
The pollsters do not cite the reasons for which
people want to leave any given country, saying only that the reasons are likely
to be country- and culture-specific. But they do note that the survey results
underline a common thread among people worldwide: a connection to others who
live abroad.

photo: NASA
Allure Of The Abroad
Across all nations, the poll found, people who
have relatives working or living in another country are more likely to consider
moving themselves. And if those relatives demonstrate greater earning power --
for example, by sending home remittances -- the allure of the abroad increases.
Which two countries are the top and bottom of the
poll for people dreaming of living abroad?
Sierra Leone has the highest number of would-be
migrants: 65 percent of those polled are ready to leave home.
And Saudi Arabia has the lowest number. Just 1
percent of respondents there say they are ready to permanently live elsewhere.