Nepal Surpasses 2 Million Migrant Workers Abroad — Brain Drain Declared Crisis
विदेशमा २० लाख नेपाली श्रमिक — ब्रेन ड्रेन संकट घोषित
What happened
More than 2 million Nepalis are now working in foreign countries. That's a lot — more than the entire population of Kathmandu. They send money home which helps Nepal's economy, but Nepal is also losing its best-educated workers.
Full Verified Record
The Department of Foreign Employment confirmed Nepal crossed 2 million registered foreign workers in March 2024, with Malaysia and Gulf countries accounting for the majority. The government's Economic Survey flagged "structural brain drain" as a national crisis. Remittances surpassed tourism, hydropower, and foreign aid combined as Nepal's largest source of foreign exchange — representing over 26% of GDP.
मार्च २०२४ मा विदेश रोजगार विभागले नेपालबाट विदेश गएका दर्ता श्रमिकको संख्या २० लाख नाघेको पुष्टि गर्यो।
Why it mattered
The 2-million milestone crystallised a long-running structural crisis: Nepal was exporting its working-age population because the domestic economy offered too few opportunities. Remittances masked the problem at a macro level while deepening social costs — absent fathers, labour shortages in agriculture, and a hollowed-out professional class.
Who was affected
Families separated by migration. Rural communities losing working-age men. Domestic service industries (agriculture, construction) facing labour shortages. Children growing up without fathers. Healthcare and education sectors losing trained personnel.
Public reaction
Complex — families relied on remittances but resented the system forcing emigration. Youth expressed alienation from a state that could not employ them.
Policy areas affected
Sources cited
- 1.
Department of Foreign Employment: Annual Report 2024
Govt of NepalAccessed 2024-03-20 - 2.
Nepal Economic Survey 2024
Ministry of FinanceAccessed 2024-06-01
Verification
verified
Editorial status
reviewed
Fact sensitivity
Level 2 of 5
Last updated
28 May 2026
