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  • In August 2016, thousands of troops amassed on the border of Lithuania and Russia.

  • Growing threats of aggression have sparked fears of a New Cold War, seeing Russia potentially

  • invading Lithuania.

  • Having one of the lowest GDPs in the European Union and struggling with mass emigration,

  • what is life really like in Lithuania?

  • Well, Lithuania is the largest and southernmost Baltic state, the others being Latvia and

  • Estonia.

  • It gained independence in 1990 just a year before the collapse of the Soviet Union --the

  • first Soviet state to do so-- and joined both NATO and the EU in 2004.

  • This, coupled with their WTO membership, has led to extreme growth by increasing trade

  • and investment from foreign nations.

  • Lithuania ranked as Europe’s top-performing economy in 2002 with the highest growth rate,

  • earning the title ofBaltic Tiger.’

  • In 2008, Lithuania fell victim to the global financial crisis, but rebounded to become

  • one of the fastest growing economies in the European Union yet again.

  • Despite this, it has, a GDP of just over 41 billion dollars, less than the GDP of the US state of Rhode Island.

  • Plagued by a rapidly aging population and mass emigration the country is losing highly

  • skilled and well-educated people to a brain drain.

  • In the space of two decades, nearly 700,000 people out of a population of roughly 2.9

  • million have left the country and yet unemployment levels remain relatively high at around 9%.

  • Two-thirds of the population work in the service sector, though the country’s largest industry

  • and export is refined oil.

  • Like other nearby countries, Lithuania is ethnically homogenous, with 84 percent of

  • the population being ethnic Lithuanian.

  • The official language is also Lithuanian, one of only two remaining Baltic languages,

  • and the nation is more than 75% Roman Catholic.

  • This identity served to unite Lithuanians in a post-Soviet atheist world and continues

  • to shape daily life with an importance placed on religious festivals and observances.

  • The country also emphasizes the sport of basketball, which has been calledthe second religion of Lithuania”.

  • With three Olympic medals and three European Championship titles, the national importance

  • of the sport is one of the reasons a disproportionate number of professional basketball players

  • are from Lithuania.

  • Though a relatively developed and modernized republic, Lithuania continues to suffer economically

  • with its low wages and low skilled workers.

  • Though economists expect GDP growth to rise in 2017, with so many people leaving the country

  • in search of better opportunities, Lithuania may have a difficult time ahead of it.

  • With Russia’s territorial aggressions worrying many of their former Soviet neighbors, a number

  • of foreign powers have openly condemned Russia’s foreign policy.

  • The United States has been a particularly vocal opponent, leading some to fear a new

  • Cold War between the two.

  • To learn about what a second Cold War would entail, check out this video up top.

  • Or to get an in depth look at life in another Baltic state, check out this video below about

  • what life is really like in Estonia.

  • Thanks for watching Seeker Daily, don’t forget to like and subscribe for more videos

  • every day!

In August 2016, thousands of troops amassed on the border of Lithuania and Russia.

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