Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 18 – Yesterday, Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka replaced
those at the top of his government with new men. In the process, he lowered the
average age of the incumbents from 60 to 49, a generational change that will matter
even if Lukashenka holds on to power for some time (belaruspartisan.org/politic/435084/).
Those
leaving were 33 when the Soviet Union disintegrated, while those coming in were
only 22. That means the former were fully formed by the Soviet system while the
latter were only beginning their careers and thus have been formed primarily by
the very different events of the 1990s and 2000s.
That
doesn’t mean the new men in this case or any other are more liberal: they may
in fact be deeply conservative and even more authoritarian than their
predecessors. But their values are different, and their assumptions about their
countries and relations between them and Moscow are different as well.
A
great deal of attention in the post-Soviet space and the West has been devoted
to questions about succession at the highest levels; but far less has been
given to this generational change under the top, a shift that has been
continuing and in some places intensifying even where the rulers remain in
place.
Such attention is especially
important now because over the next decade, almost all those who were formed in
Soviet times will have reached retirement – anyone who was at least 30 in 1991
will be at least 69 in 2030, well past the retirement age for most.
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