Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 12 – The Committee
on Civic Initiatives’ report on emigration from Russia (komitetgi.ru/analytics/2977/) has attracted much attention
for its findings that far more Russians have been leaving than Moscow says, that
they are better educated and more skilled than those who remain, and that they
are leaving for political as well as economic reasons.
But
a fourth reason, Radio Liberty Tatar/Bashkir service commentator Artur Khaziyev
says, has attracted less attention but is critical because it highlights the
bind Russia’s regions and republics now find themselves in. If they promote development,
given the limits Moscow imposes on them, they almost certainly will see more
emigration (idelreal.org/a/28045373.html).
The CCI study found that “more
people who are from regions with high macro-economic indicators are going
abroad than those from subjects that are less developed economically,” Khaziyev
says. The former have people with the
skills businesses abroad want, and the regions and republics can do little
about the social and political conditions that are pushing many out.
That puts republics like Tatarstan
is a bind. They can if they have funds promote economic development and
diversification, but because they cannot control the social and political
situation – Moscow does that – they may lose their most talented people to emigration
and thus as it were lose by winning, something that isn’t sustainable for long.
Educated specialists are the basis
of long-term economic development, he continues, and it is far more difficult to
attract them with money alone. “In order
to attract them, one must solve those problems which are the causes for
emigration. Otherwise, other countries where these problems have been solved
will become more attractive for capable and talented people.
“In earlier centuries,” Khaziyev
writes, “governments competed for natural resources and military-administrative
control over markets.” But now, “the competition of states and regions for talented
people and specialists who in turn are more mobile than ever before is becoming
far more important.”
And that competition is taking place
within countries as well as among them, something that is likely to go a long
way in defining the broader political agenda of regions within the Russian
Federation in the coming decades because they know they can’t afford to lose
their best people and thereby their best hopes, whatever Moscow does.
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