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#17 - JRL 2006-141 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
June 19, 2006
Russia Needs Urgent Measures as Population Dwindles
MOSCOW. (Andrei Kolesnikov, RIA Novosti political commentator) - Recent
demographic trends in Russia have caused widespread public concern and have
given rise to interminable discussions.
In fact, everything there is to say about depopulation has already been said,
and there seems to be no way to change the opinions of any of the debaters.
The academic outlook of sociologists and demographers is to regard
depopulation as a lasting trend, which Soviet experts forecast already back in
the 1960s. Russia shares this with all developed countries. It is at the top of
their problem list, alongside working age population shrinkage, which is just
starting, and the aging of the population.
Politicians tend to have a different view of the problem. As they present it,
"predatory reforms" of the 1990s caused a genocide of ethnic Russians, and an
influx of nationals from former Soviet republics. All of this, they allege, has
lead to rising unemployment rates, alcoholism and general degeneration of the
Russian ethnos.
A recent Open Forum club session brought demographers, sociologists,
statisticians and economists together. Although the experts used academic
terminology, the implication of what they said was slanting toward the
politicians' view.
Therefore we will focus here on a single feature of the process: the
political outcome of depopulation and related trends.
Ethnic Russians will make up only 1% of the world population fifty years from
now, warns Andrei Illarionov, a former presidential economic adviser.
Encouraging families to have more children came as an initial, and largely
spontaneous, government response to the falling birth rates. That was a natural
approach to take, but, experts unanimously agree, it was doomed from the start.
Token rises in maternity payments cannot reverse a social trend determined not
so much by incomes as by lifestyle. Young couples do not want to have big
families because they focus on education and career, and prefer to have leisure
to taking the trouble raising children. Here, too, Russia shares a global trend.
It would be a more far reaching policy to raise the standard of living for
students, working age people and pensioners, thereby combating death rates,
which are, in fact, a far worse problem than low birth rates, says Irina
Zbarskaya, Federal Statistical Service population census board chief.
Here, we come to immigration, a promising way to replenish the workforce,
whose scarcity will become the worst of all Russian resource shortages within a
few years.
Russia's working age population will be steadily shrinking from 2007 on, and
only immigrants can fill the gap. Already now, Russia needs 700,000 new
immigrants a year. The problem is too great to admit only the educated and the
qualified: what we need is a mass inflow, not limited to ethnic Russians from
former USSR republics, for whom it is obviously easier to become assimilated as
they speak the same language and share common beliefs. The majority of
immigrants will have to be non-Russians. According to demographer Zhanna
Zaionchkovskaya, ethnic Russians in the CIS can amount to about four million
immigrants, a resource that will soon be exhausted. Moreover, we cannot be sure
these people will choose to emigrate to their ancestral land.
So, Russia will have to put up with massive labor immigration. The workforce
inflow is certain to concentrate in big cities, which offer the highest living
standards. That will make cities even more overpopulated and multi-ethnic than
now. The negative outcome is that the population density will become ever more
uneven. A patchwork ethnic composition breeds another bad problem. It gives rise
to ethnic ghettos, unless the host country cares to legalize immigrant
employment and promote immigrant cultural adaptation. There is a danger that
local residents will become intolerant in the cities and all over Russia. The
situation breeds and institutionalizes radical nationalism, which penetrates Big
Politics and takes firm root in the public mentality to dominate political
debates. As a worst case scenario, Nazi views will spread throughout the
country.
Prevention of Nazism and promotion of tolerance have crossed the boundaries
of the human rights cause. If Russians fail to reach those goals, their sheer
survival will be at stake in the economic, social and political spheres. Russia
is on the threshold of a formidable crisis - the crisis of national identity. We
share that problem, too, with the best-developed countries. Significantly,
Samuel P. Huntington titled one of his latest books, "Who Are We? The Challenges
to America's National Identity." He analyzes the problem of new American
self-identification in the context of globalization, and an increasing impact of
Hispanic and Chinese immigrants. "America becomes the world. The world becomes
America. America remains America," the author concludes.
A former empire, this country has seen those trends, too, and it has every
right to repeat: "Russia becomes the world. The world becomes Russia. Russia
remains Russia." This is an extremely involved situation, in which it is hard to
find the correct frame of reference.
There is another aspect to the problem. Purely social, it has a political
tinge to it. Depopulation and the growing share of senior citizens in the
community will critically increase taxpayers' burden in order to support
pensioners, even if the immigrant workforce adapts as soon and as profoundly as
possible. The present-day egalitarian distribution pension system will be
doomed. Taxes will probably skyrocket to keep the avalanche in check. All that
will breed public discontent, another big political problem. It seems there is
only one way out of the situation: to step up the pension reform and shift to
accumulative privately invested pensions as the basis of pension payments.
Russia will not be able to resolve political problems caused by the
demographic crisis unless it displays political determination to tackle those
problems, and takes a proactive approach to reforming immigration policies,
labor relations and the pension system.
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