Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 10 – The Russian labor ministry projects that in 2020, fertility rates
in predominantly ethnic Russian regions will remain well below the replacement
level of 2.2 children per woman per lifetime while in non-Russian regions,
including Tuva, the Altai and Chechnya, they will remain above, Izvestiya reports today.
That
means that the ethnic balance in the Russian Federation will continue to change
even if fertility rates in some non-Russian regions are falling compared to
what they were a generation ago, with the share of Russians declining and the
share of non-Russians increasing in the future.
Neither
the labor ministry nor the newspaper’s Anna Ivushkina and Daniil Kuzin,
however, stress this ethnic dimension, preferring instead to say that Russia
expects “the highest coefficients of births in distant [but unnamed] regions of
the country” (iz.ru/776263/anna-ivushkina-daniil-kuzin/demograficheskii-vzryv-v-sibiri-i-na-kavkaze-stanut-bolshe-rozhat).
Overall, the ministry says, the
countrywide fertility rate should rise from 1.62 now to 1.65 in 2020 on its way
to 1.7 in 2024, all figures well below replacement levels. But even that boost
will come from places at least some in Moscow will be less than thrilled by:
Tuva with a projected rate of 3.4, Chechnya with 2.92, the Altair 2.9, and
Buryatia, 2.28.
All these unlike predominantly
ethnic Russian regions where the figures are below 1.6 are non-Russian and
non-Orthodox.
A major driver of these differences,
the paper says, is a radical difference in age structure. Predominantly ethnic
Russian regions are far older on average, something that means there are fewer
women in the prime child-bearing age cohorts than is the case in the much
younger over all populations of these non-Russian regions.
Given that demographic reality, the
ethnic Russian regions are likely to experience
a continuing decline in population while non-Russian republics in many
cases are likely to continue to grow in size absolutely and relatively.
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