Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 13 – Income inequality
in Russia may not be significantly greater than in other BRICS countries, but
its nature, the rapidity of its onset, and the particular groups it has
affected most mean that it is threatening the political stability of the country,
according to Vasily Anikin and Natalya Tikhonova of the Moscow Higher School of
Economics.
In a 37-page study of the specifically
Russian features of income inequality that were identified in the course of a
study of income differentiation in the BRICS group, the two say that Russian
income inequality now greater than that in Europe or the US threatens to
destabilize the Russian political system (hse.ru/pubs/share/direct/document/179645132).
Over the last 25 years, the two
researchers say, the bottom deciles of the Russian population, a group that
includes the educated middle class, have been impoverished while the share of
national income going to the highest deciles has risen from 33 percent to 47
percent, a change and a speed of change which many Russians feel is unjust.
The most important conclusion of the
report is that the Russian poor are not like the poor in other BRICS countries:
They do not consist of poorly educated, agricultural or lumpen populations.
Rather, most of the poor in Russia are “employed city residents who usually
have at a minimum a full secondary education.”
Consequently, the gap between their
expectations and the reality of their lives is extraordinarily large,
especially give the conspicuous consumption of the very wealthy. (On this
phenomenon, see also novayagazeta.ru/comments/73796.html.) Not surprisingly, many of the uniquely Russian
poor are angry and blame the government for their situation.
Anikin
and Tikhonova argue that the Russian authorities must do more to combat this
kind of poverty, pushing up wages where possible, improving education in rural
areas, and providing special assistance to young people who for reasons not of
their own making find themselves in difficult straits. Otherwise, there will be problems.
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