Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 14 – Forty-six
federal subjects with ethnic Russian majorities, including three republics –
Adygeya, Karelia and Mordvinia – where the titular nationality is in the
minority are in demographic decline because their populations have fewer births than
deaths, according to a Tula lawmaker.
That and the declining number of
ethnic Russians in the prime child-bearing age cohort make it critical,
Vladimir Timakov of the Tula City Duma argues, that Moscow provide funds to
these and other predominantly ethnic Russian areas in order to fulfill
President Vladimir Putin’s call for Russian parents to have three children lest
the ethnic balance shift against them further (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2012/12/14/vse_46_depressivnyh_po_rozhdaemosti_subektov_rf_zemli_russkogo_rasseleniya/).
And both the current situation of
ethnic Russians and their future demographic behavior may be even worse than
those figures suggest, according to Timakov and other writers this week. On the one hand, many Russian areas show a
net increase of births over deaths only because of the behavior of Central
Asian immigrants.
And on the other, some Russian
officials are employing various means, including changing the borders of megalopolises
like Moscow, in order to be able to claim that the share of ethnic Russians in
their population has remained the same or making claims that cannot be checked
because Moscow has not published certain kinds of data sets in this area since
2007.
In his article which was posted
online today, Timakov suggests that Putin’s pronouncement is “very timely”
because “Russia stands on the brink of a negative shift in the structure of the
population,” one driven by low birthrates in the 1990s that mean ever fewer
women in the prime child-bearing age groups for the next decade or more.
Consequently, if Russians continue
to have two children or less – and that is now the norm, Timakov says, they
will suffer further demographic decline because the number of available mothers
is falling and falling fast, from 25 million in 2010 to 21 million in 2020 and
17 million in 2030.
“The demographic rebirth” of the
country in the first decade of this century that Moscow has celebrated “occurred
on the basis of a stable number of the maternal generation and almost
exclusively as a result of the shift of family priorities from one-child
families to two-child ones,” Timakov says.
And the fact that Russians have a
lower fertility rate than many non-Russian groups in the country means that
Moscow must focus its attention to Russian regions. Timakov draws an analogy
with the North Caucasus: “If the Caucasus receives priority budgetary
assistance as a socially depressed region, then central Russian should receive
priority assistance as a zone of demographic depression.”
There are a few exceptions to this
general pattern of deaths exceeding births among Russians, Timakov says. TAhere
is “a positive demographic balance in Siberia, with the exceptin of Kemerovo,
in the North and in the Urals with the exception of Kurgan, and also in Moscow
and St. Petersburg.”
But as other
analysts have pointed out this week, the situation for the ethnic Russians is
far more dire than Timakov’s figures suggest.
In an article posted on the APN.ru portal today, Yuri Nersesov points
out that Central Asian immigrants to Moscow and other major cities help boost
the regional numbers (www.apn.ru/publications/article27815.htm).
Once the migrants officially
register with the city authorities, any births and deaths among them are ascribed
to the region as a whole. That is entirely appropriate, but in the absence of ethnically
arrayed fertility data, something the Putin regime has suppressed, such
inclusion allows officials to claim that the ethnic Russians are doing better
than they are.
And V.D. Kuznechevsky, a senior
scholar at the Moscow Center of Humanitarian Research, says that officials in
Moscow have adopted yet another strategy to ensure that their claims that
ethnic Russians are maintaining their share of the city’s population remain
plausible (www.riss.ru/?commentsId=321).
In a major review of the state of “the
nationality question” in the Russian capital, Kuznechevsky notes that the city
administration has expanded the borders of the city in ways that include
territories with a greater share of ethnic Russians than the city as a whole,
thus boosting the share of Russians overall.
Meanwhile, Enver Kisriyev, a senior
scholar on the Caucasus at the Russian Academy of Sciences Center of
Civilizational and Regional Research, points to another part of the demographic
equation that Putin and most Moscow commentators this week have chosen to
ignore: super high mortality rates among ethnic Russian men.
Kisriyev told journalists last week that
mortality rates among the non-Russian nationalities are significantly lower
than those among ethnic Russians elsewhere in the country, something that
further tips the balance and an issue that the Kremlin does not appear to be
focused on (www.bigcaucasus.com/review/interview/07-12-2012/81760-kisriev_intervju-0/).
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