Paul Goble
Staunton, August 16 – According to a
new survey of 9500 young people aged 21 to 35 in the Russian Far East, 47
percent of people don’t want to get married or have children, 27 percent are ready
to marry but not to have children, and only 26 percent saying they want both,
figures that make the achievement of Vladimir Putin’s demographic goals there impossible.
The survey was conducted by the
Black Cube Center for Social Innovation. Both its results and their
implications were discussed today by the center’s director Yury Kolomeytsev on
the Regnum news portal. He says that no one should think that this pattern is
going to change anytime soon (regnum.ru/news/society/2310688.html).
“The most
unfavorable regions of the Far East from the point of view of planned fertility
among the population under the age of 35 are Khabarovsk kray, Magadan oblast,
Kamchatka, Chukotka and Primorsky kray,” all predominantly ethnic Russian
regions, the researcher continues.
The situation is somewhat better in
Sakhalin and in Sakha, where 45 and 39 percent of young people say they are
planning to marry and have children. In
Sakha, “only a third of those surveyed said they were negatively inclined to
the creation of the family, and in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast and the Amur
oblast, this figure was still lower, 32 percent.”
According to Kolomeytsev, “favorable
conditions for the natural growth of demography can arise only in those Far
Eastern regions in which the local population is prepared to remain and
continue its family life. In subjects with high labor and educational migration,
one should not expect any real improvement in the demographic situation in the
coming years.”
Overall demographic numbers confirm
this. Primorsky kray, he points out, continues to decline and to decline at
ever increasing rates,” exactly the opposite of what Putin has called for. In Sakhalin, the government has had to
intervene massively to support the increasingly impoverished population. Its
actions may explain why there is less opposition to families there.
But the task of regional governments
in this regard is enormous. In Sakhalin, “47 percent of all monetary income is
concentrated in the hands of 20 percent of the population. The remainder live
in poverty, with 1.4 percent having incomes less than 7,000 rubles [a month or
110 US dollars]. The incomes of Sakhalin’s poor are 16 times less than those of
its rich.
The Sakhalin authorities claim they
have reduced the number of those in poverty in 2016, but Regnum notes, “experts
consider that [the people involved] have not had their material position
improved but simply have left for other regions in search of a better life.”
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