President Vladimir Putin said the most urgent problem facing Russia is its demographic crisis
Steven Eke:
The country's population is declining by at least 700,000 people each year, leading to slow depopulation of the northern and eastern extremes of Russia, the emergence of hundreds of uninhabited "ghost villages" and an increasingly aged workforce.
Now, one of Russia's leading sociologists has warned that the country's population may halve by the middle of this century.
Official Russian forecasts, along with those from international organisations like the UN, predict a decline from 146 million to between 80 and 100 million by 2050.
But in an exclusive interview to the BBC, Viktor Perevedentsev, who has been studying Russia's population since the 1960s, said he believed even these figures may be overly optimistic.
He said the decline was likely to accelerate and that the Russian leadership should accept the population had reached a "tipping point", beyond which direct intervention would be ineffective.
Birth-rates in many developed, industrialised countries are stagnant or declining. But when this is combined with very low life-expectancy and an increasingly unhealthy population, Mr Perevedentsev agrees that the term "catastrophe" reflects reality. It is not a case of hyperbole from overly emotional Russian patriots, he says.
Mr Perevedentsev explained that people have the majority of children between certain definable ages. In Russia, this is generally earlier than in Western countries. But the percentage of potential parents of child-bearing age within the Russian population is itself so small that state-funded efforts, by definition, can bring only temporary results.
Mr Perevedentsev points to how the Soviet government, at the beginning of the 1980s, undertook similar measures in response to concerns over falling birth-rates. They produced a mini "baby boom", lasting just two or three years, before the long-term decline reasserted itself.
Even if all young Russian women could be persuaded to have several children, Mr Perevedentsev warns, the same is likely to happen again.
The seriousness of this problem has led to an urgent, polarised and often angry debate in Russia about ways to tackle the problem.
Many medical specialists berate the government's apparent inaction over the country's health crisis. It is estimated that a third of Russian men abuse alcohol, while smoking rates are among the highest in the world. New threats, such as the rapid spread of HIV/Aids, merely compound an already bad situation, they say.
Politicians on the nationalist wing of the political spectrum see the hand of the West, and of Russia's "enemies" more widely, in the population decline.
One commentary recently published by the "Rodina" (Motherland) movement suggested those Russian sociologists making the gloomiest predictions were, themselves, in the pay of western organisations committed, literally, to destroying Russia.
Meanwhile, Russian economists warn of the long-term consequences for the country's growth.
Some have suggested an official programme of controlled immigration, to encourage workers from the former Soviet republics and further afield to come to live and work in Russia. This is a controversial suggestion and appears to have been rejected at the very top.
In his recent state of the nation address, President Putin said "no sort of immigration will solve Russia's demographic problem".
At the same time, some officials and nationalist politicians have begun to utter a loaded term last used three decades ago by Soviet planners - "differentiated birth-rates".
It reflects concern that while ethnic Russians fare so badly, there are other, predominantly Muslim, population groups that are experiencing very rapid growth.
Some of the peoples of the North Caucasus - especially Chechens, Ingush and Dagestanis - are rapidly growing in number. The last Soviet census (1989), showed 611 Chechens for every 100,000 population. The most recent Russian census (2002) showed that figure had increased to 937 - an increase of more than 50%.
Number of HIV-infected Women in Russia Growing
3 Comments:
Economic problems coming out of the collapse of the Soviet Union have really devastated Russia.
The PRC will be taking over the former Soviet Far East at some point. My only question is whether it will be done peacefully or through war and when it will happen. In the lates 1960's the PRC and the CCCP had some border skirmishes along the Amur River (I think). I don't know who beat up on who. One thing is for sure, the Chinese are not afraid of public opinion (remember Tianamen) and not afraid of taking heavy casualties (WW2, Korea, fighting Vietnam in 1979, etc...) Maybe if the Russians were smart, they would sell it to the Chinese like they sold Russia to the US?
Economic problems coming out of the collapse of the Soviet Union have really devastated Russia
The birth rate problem seems to have predated the fall of the Soviet Union and was first noticed back in the 1980's, according to the article.
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