Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 30 – Vladimir Putin’s
maternal capital program has done little to boost birthrates in Russia, but that
should not have come as a surprise as pro-natalist programs even far better
funded in other countries have not succeeded in doing so either. But the program is valuable, Aleksey
Mikhailov says, because it has limited poverty among Russian children.
International experience shows, the
Moscow analyst says, that governments can have an impact on demographic
behavior but more on the negative than the positive side. Thus, China’s
one-child policy worked, but well-funded European programs to boost birthrates
have not (profile.ru/economics/item/118170-kupit-rebenka).
Indeed, Mikhaylov says, there are almost
no examples of successful programs to boost birthrates. Instead, there are two
common trends: “the better people live, the fewer children they have” but at
the same time, if people become poorer, they also will have fewer
children. In short, to influence
demographic behavior in a positive way is almost impossible.
But that doesn’t mean that Moscow
should, as some are now suggesting, eliminate or severely cut the maternal
capital program. Instead, the analyst argues, Russians should see it as helping
to address “the traditional tasks of social policy, the reduction of the level
of poverty and inequality.”
Indeed, understood in this way, the
maternal capital program should be expanded because while it does not do
enough, it can prevent many children and their parents from falling into
poverty. That is a noble goal, and it is
one that far too few Russian government programs are now focused on.
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