Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 29 – The
emigration of members of Russia’s “creative class,” after declining slightly
during the upsurge in social and political activism at the end of 2011, is
growing again because these people on whom the future of the country depends
feel that the current regime has put too many obstacles in their path.
In “Nezavisimaya gazeta” last
Friday, Aleksandr Samarina says that Russian sociologists have found that
feeling unneeded in Russia, “the emigration of the creative class is growing,
and what is important, the number of people who are considering this option for
themselves is increasing as well” (www.ng.ru/politics/2012-10-26/1_emigration.html).
According to surveys by the Public
Opinion Foundation, 17 percent of Russians would like to move abroad, a figure
two percent higher than last year, and three percent higher than in 2007. Among those aged 18 to 30, one in three would
like to move abroad to find work in their fields.
Aleksandr Oslon, the Foundation’s
director says, that ever more Russians view such emigration quite calmly and “the
majority of people are certain that emigration will increase.” He notes that more than half of those
thinking about leaving are ready to remain “if they see that Russia needs them,”
something they do not see now.
The unfortunate reality, Oslon says,
is that “the active part of society lives in a zone of unfavorable human
ecology.” These people “want to develop;
they need dynamism and success. But before them arise too many obstacles and
too many people who can interfere” with their chances of moving forward.
“In December of last year,” the
sociologist continues, it was “precisely these people who went into the squares
to demonstrate.” Dishonest elections
were the proximate cause, but underlying that was the sense that they faced an “unfavorable
ecology for their lives” and lived in a place where too many officials “have
the right to interfere in their lives.”
Lev Gudkov, the director of the
Levada Center, agrees. According to his
surveys, “half of the middle class” in Russia has thought about leaving the
country, although only “about four to six percent” have taken steps to do
so. In the spring of 2011, that number
went up to 22 percent, then declined “during the fall demonstrations,” but now
is “again growing.”
Over the last decade, Gudkov says, approximately
1.5 million representatives of the Russian middle class have left the country, “the
most educated, the most successful, and the most entrepreneurial people” Russia
had. They left, he says, because they
knew that they had few paths to success at home and could not defend their
earnings or families if they achieved it.
And Mikhail Delyagin, a commentator
who heads the Moscow Institute of the Problems of Globalization, provides an
additional detail on this emigration: “The most active people who are seeking
to get out of Russia are going not only to the West, the fashionable countries,
but ever more often to China which by the way in recent years has shown an enormous
willingness to take in refugees from the Russian Federation.”
According to Delyagin, Moscow could
change this situation, but it doesn’t appear ready to do so. “It is a good thing that the financing of the
socially dependent part of the population remains stable. This is what secures
the high ratings of the leadership of the country” at the present time.
But the Moscow commentator notes, “the
future of Russia, including the financial well-being of those who are provided
with such funds to a great degree depends on those who are capable of pushing
its economy forward. These people don’t
protest loudly in the streets. They [simply and] quietly leave.”
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