Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 27 – If current
trends continue, with ever fewer immigrants from Central Asia and the Caucasus
coming to Russia and with birthrates among Russia’s larger non-Russian
nationalities remaining low, Zhanna Zayonchkovskaya says, the Chinese will be
the second largest nationality in Russia by mid-century.
The senior scholar at the Russian
Academy of Sciences Institute for Economic Predictions said that Russia has no
choice but to rely on immigrant workers and that it has no other source except
for China on which it is likely to be able to rely in the next several decades (newizv.ru/society/2016-10-26/248390-cherez-35-let-kitajcy-mogut-stat-vtorym-po-chislennosti-narodom-v-rossii.html
and tass.ru/obschestvo/3735857).
Zayanchkovskaya added
that Russia will not be able to do without massive immigration even if it
raises the pension age. Doing that, she said, “will not level out the demographic
waves or the problems of having a sufficient number of working age people. It
will solve the problems of the pension fund, but the demographic situation will
remain just as complex.”
There are three reasons
why her remarks are likely to be especially disturbing to many Russians:
·
First, Russians have long been accustomed
to believe that the second largest nationality in the Russian Federation are
the Tatars, a group which Russians generally view as integrated or at least
Russian speaking, qualities not found among immigrants from Central Asia, the
Caucasus or China.
·
Second, Zayanchkovsky’s words also suggest
that one or more of the Central Asian or Caucasian country migration flows into
Russia is larger than the six million Tatars, a conclusion that if true means immigration
into the Russian Federation is far larger than any Moscow official has ever
acknowledged.
·
And third, her projection not only feeds
into Russian fears about the overwhelming size of China’s population opposite
Russia’s underpopulated Siberia and Far East but also may have consequences for
the country’s ethnic mix far sooner than even the Moscow demographer suggests.
The reason for that final
point is that there is evidence that an ever larger number of young Chinese men
who can’t find spouses at home because of Beijing’s notorious one-child policy
that led to gender-selection-driven abortions are coming to Russia to find
brides (politkuhnya.info/novosti/kitai-zahvatit-rossiyu_-cherez-postel.html).
Many of these new mixed
couples are returning to China, but at least some are remaining to live and
work in Russia, a trend likely to transform the ethnic mix in Russia east of
the Urals if not yet in the country as a whole.
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