Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 7 – As a result
of the economic crisis, Russians are not traveling abroad in anything like the
numbers they did only two years ago, thus losing the chance to exercise one of
the rights that they routinely identify as among the most important
opportunities the end of the Soviet system gave them.
But at the same time, and perhaps
equally important, a new poll shows that relatively few Russians living beyond
Moscow’s ring road are coming the capital, a development that reflects the
rising cost of travel within Russia and one that almost certainly means that
the anti-Moscow feelings that affect many in Russia’s regions will only
intensify.
An article in today’s “Novyye
izvestiya” suggests that the current economic and political crisis has “driven
Russians behind a new ‘iron curtain,’” with the number of Russians travelling
abroad having dropped by 34 percent in the first half of this year (newizv.ru/economics/2015-09-07/226793-nevyezdnaja-strana.html).
According to the paper’s Georgy
Stepanov, this is “the biggest decline” in that statistic over the last two
decades. Nothing like it happened either in 1998 [the year of the Russian
default] or in 2009 [when the international economic crisis hit].” The reason
is a “banal” one, he suggests: most Russians simply do not have the money to
make such trips now.
According to the Association of
Russian Tour Operators, the number of Russians who will travel abroad this year
will be between ten and eleven million, down from 17.6 million last year. That
group says that the declining value of the ruble against currencies like the US
dollar and the EU euro are pricing foreign travel beyond the means of ever more
Russians.
The decline in the number of
Russians travelling abroad began in the spring of 2014 before sanctions were introduced,
a reflection of the fall of the ruble which in turn was the result of falling
oil prices. But a certain role appears to have been played, Stepanov says, by “the
escalation in Russian society of an anti-Western information psychology
campaign.”
Average Russians, Moscow tourist
agency officials say, quickly discovered that “with rare exceptions,” those who
did go abroad did not encounter any of the problems the Russian media had led
them to expect. And consequently, these officials suggest, the impact of that
campaign on Russians’ travel plans quickly declined. The economic factor
dominates.
The decline in the number of
Russians travelling abroad has led to “one absolutely new phenomenon.” Ever
more Russians are seeking to cancel their reservations and get their money
back, something that is creating serious problems for many tour companies, more
than half of which have gone out of business over the last year.
Another development has been a
rising tide of complaints by Russians that Aeroflot has not cut fares despite
the declines in the price of fuel. One reason the airline hasn’t is that the
prices it pays for licensing planes as well as landing rights and other
services abroad have gone up.
At the same time, Stepanov writes,
one should not exaggerate the impact of this. Today, only 18 percent of the
Russian population has a passport for travelling abroad, and over the last 25
years, only 20 percent of Russians have gone abroad, including to visit
relatives in the post-Soviet states.
In
the long term, Russian tour operators expect foreign travel to make a comeback;
but in the next few months, they say, the current downward trend is likely to
continue and may even intensify.
Meanwhile,
a survey by VTsIOM found that “only 26 percent” of Russians had visited Moscow
even once over the last four years, and that 34 percent of all Russians said
they had never been in the Russian capital, a remarkable pattern given the
Moscow-centricity of Russian life (nr2.com.ua/News/culture_and_science/Sociologi-mnozhestvo-rossiyan-nikogda-ne-byvali-v-sobstvennoy-stolice-105502.html).
The poll found two other interesting
patterns: Russians living in cities with a population of a million or more were
less likely to have visited Moscow than those living in smaller cities or rural
areas, and those without completed educations were more likely to visit the
Russian capital than those with diplomas and degrees.
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