Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 30 – Even the
slightest uptick in birthrate figures in the Russian Federation is celebrated
by Moscow as evidence of the efficacy of Russian government actions, but in
fact a new study shows the impact of government policy on this most personal of
choice is much less than many assume.
Not only do the summary figures
Moscow routinely trumpets conceal still-enormous differences among the nations
of the country with non-Russian and especially non-Orthodox peoples typically
still having higher fertility rates and larger growth rates because of higher
ones in earlier generations, but they conceal some deeper trends that may
matter even more.
In a study, a summary of which as
posted online yesterday, Yevgeny Andreyev of the Center for Demographic
Research of the Russian School of Economics, calls attention to several of
these trends on the basis of his study of demographic statistics in the USSR
and the Russian Federation for the period of 1965 to 2012 (opec.ru/1702115.html).
The data show, he says, that “government
measures in the area of demographic policy do not always lead to a growth in the
fertility rate.” Instead, at least three deeper and broader patterns are at
work, patterns that the state can affect at the margins but does not seem able
to change in any fundamental way.
First, Andreyev points out, over the
last few years Russia has benefitted from a worldwide trend. Beginning in 2008, he notes, there was “a
worldwide trend” away from “the super-lower fertility” of the previous
decade. “In all countries where the
fertility rate was 1.2 to 1.3 children per woman, it growth began.”
Second, fertility patterns changed
in the Russian Federation according to what the demographer calls “conformist
fertility.” “In the USSR, unlike countries with a market economy, all women had
a similar or almost similar number of children. Now, a polarization has begun”
with women in business often having none and those not having three or even
more.
And third, other social problems,
including patterns of alcohol consumption, clearly appear to have an impact on
fertility rates, although the exact relationship remains a hypothetical one
pending further research. Some surveys suggest that “families of men who drink
have fewer children,” but one cannot yet say this is true across the entire
country.
Government policy can affect these
trends at the margins, but unless that policy is far more radical than has been
the case recently, it will not change them dramatically. In support of that
view, Andreyev points to the impact of Gorbachev’s extremely unpopular and
ill-fated anti-alcohol campaign.
Thanks to that effort, the Soviet
Union reached a fertility rate of 2.2 children per woman per lifetime, the
first time it had reached replacement levels since 1963, an outcome that even
pro-natalist Soviet government policies had not achieved. Another benefit of
that campaign was that live expectancies reached their highest level ever – one
that Russian men have not approached since.
Andreyev says
that the data do not support the frequently-advanced claims that Vladimir Putin’s
maternal capital program has been responsible for the growth in fertility
rates. In fact, fertility had begun to
grow “long before the December 2006 adoption of that law” and the boost in the
numbers in the months following in fact reflected pre-legislative behavior.
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