Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 10 – The Moscow
Center for Economic and Political Reforms has released a report showing that
Russia now is “a country of dying villages,” one in which in predominantly
ethnic Russian areas one in five villages have no residents and in which by 2023
there will be no hospitals and by 2034 no schools.
“Only in the period between the 2002
and 2010 census,” the report says, “the number of villages without any people
grew by more than 6,000,” and declines in the remaining villages were so great
that “in more than half of all rural population points now live from one to 100
people.”
Drawing on official statistics,
sociological studies and its own research, the Center in its 39-page report paints
a depressing picture of rural Russia, one that has long been in decline but
whose future appears likely to be even bleaker than it has been in the recent
past (cepr.su/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/Россия-страна-умирающих-деревень.pdf).
Among the most obvious measures of
this decline and one of the drivers pointing to the demise of the Russian
village in the future is the collapse of infrastructure. Since 2000 alone, the
number of schools in rural Russia has fallen from 45,100 in 2000 to 25,900 in
2014, the number of hospitals from 4300 to 1060 and the number of clinics from
8400 to 3060.
That suggests that there will not be
any rural hospitals by 2023 or any rural schools and polyclinics by the early
2030s. And their closings both reflect and will seriously accelerate the flight
of population from the rural parts of the country to the cities, a flight
already being driven by economic and social problems in the villages.
“The main causes” for the decline in
the rural population lie in the lower standard of living and higher
unemployment and crime there. Moreover,
the report notes, prices in villages are higher than in cities because of
distribution and transportation difficulties even though incomes are much
lower.
Communal services in Russian
villages are much worse than in the cities. “Only 57 percent of rural housing
has a connection to water,” and “only 33 percent” have hot water at any time of
the year. Moreover, only 54.7 percent
have potable drinking water, and only five percent have indoor plumbing, a
figure that has remained unchanged since 1995.
Not surprisingly, those who can
leave for the cities are doing so; but that trend has been accelerated by
Russian government policies in recent years, the Center concludes; and all
proposed means of retaining population in the rural areas has proved to be
empty. To be successful, the country would have to spend vast sums it currently
doesn’t have.
Urbanization and the hollowing out
of rural areas is a worldwide one, but in few developed countries is the gap
between the rural world and the urban one as great as it is in Russia and in
few of them has the government done as little to try to ensure that rural
residents are left so far behind.
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