By Oliver Staley
As a pharmaceutical salesman in Greece for 17 years, Tilemachos Karachalios
wore a suit, drove a company car and had an expense account. He now mops
schools in Sweden, forced from his home by Greece’s economic crisis.
“It was a very good job,” said Karachalios, 40, of his former life. “Now I
clean Swedish s---.”
Karachalios, who left behind his six-year-old daughter to be raised by his
parents, is one of thousands fleeing Greece’s record 24 percent unemployment and austerity measures
that threaten to undermine growth. The number of Greeks seeking permission to
settle in Sweden, where there are more jobs and a stable economy, almost
doubled to 1,093 last year from 2010, and is on pace to increase again this
year.
“I’m trying to survive,” Karachalios said in an interview in Stockholm.
“It’s difficult here, very difficult. I would prefer to stay in Greece. But we
don’t have jobs.”
Greece is in its fifth year of recession, with the economy expected to
contract 6.9 percent this year, the same as in 2011, according to the
Athens-based Foundation for
Economic and Industrial Research. Since 2008, the number of
jobless has more than tripled to a record 1.22 million as of June, out of a
total population of 10.8 million.
“In Greece, there was no future,” said Ourania Michtopoulou, who moved with
her husband to Sweden in 2010 after both lost
textile industry jobs in Thessaloniki, where they had a comfortable life with a
house and car. “Here, I can hope for something good to happen. Maybe not for me
-- I’m 48 -- but maybe for my children.”
‘Go Home’
Their family now crams into a small apartment, while her husband, Nikos,
works for a landscaper and her teenage children struggle with Swedish lessons.
“It was not easy for them,” she said. “My daughter said lots of times, ‘I hate
Sweden -- I want to go home.’”
Karachalios began his career in pharmaceutical sales after his mandatory
military service, working at three different companies in the southern city of
Patras. He married a Chinese woman he met at the 2004 Athens Olympics, had a
daughter, and divorced.
“You can plan, you can organize, you can make plans for 10 years, 20 years,
but you don’t know what life brings,” he said.






















