Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 16 – The Russian government likes to blame the demographic problems
the country is facing today on the wild 1990s, Igor Nikolayev says, a charge
that contains some truth but that allows the current rulers to avoid taking
responsibility for what is a far more significant cause: the current economic
crisis.
The
constant references of officials “to events of 25 and 30 years ago,” the
economist says, represent “a clear sign of the inability of the authorities to
take responsibility on themselves for all that is occurring in the country” (mk.ru/economics/2018/11/16/rossiya-vymiraet-vlasti-nazvali-neozhidannuyu-prichinu-demograficheskogo-krizisa.html).
It is true, he acknowledges, that
the depressed birthrates in the difficult 1990s are having an echo now because
there are fewer women in prime child-bearing age cohorts. But if everything else were equal, Russia would
not be experiencing the demographic problems that it clearly is.
Almost all of them have to do with
the economy, Nikolayev argues. With incomes falling, people are putting off
having children or not having them at all. With spending on medical care
declining, more people are dying earlier than they otherwise would. And with the
economy in a tailspin, fewer immigrants are coming to Russia to work.
If the powers that be find it
difficult to recognize all this, he continues, then Russians need “to do it for
them.” They can start by pointing out a fundamental error in the logic of those
at the top of the political pyramid. People there believe that economic
problems in the 1990s had a bad impact on demography, but they don’t admit that
the same thing is true now.
Moreover, the Russian government
acts as if demographic problems, be they boosting the birthrate, reducing
mortality or attracting immigrants can be achieved by campaigns rather than by
continuing and interconnected policies that are based on an understanding that
what happens in one sector affects what happens in another.
If one reads the government’s
strategy documents, Nikolayev argues, he or she will find many good things such
as a commitment to rely on natural increases rather than immigrants for
demographic growth. But almost
immediately, the reader will discover that there is no clear roadmap and that
the attention of officials to these issues is only occasional rather than
constant.
Unless all that changes and unless
the government admits to itself and to the Russian people that it bears responsibility
for the current problems and will work to correct them, first by boosting
economic growth to the extent it can and then by addressing specific
demographic issues, the situation will only get worse.
And then 25 or 30 years from now,
some future Russian government will blame the problems it faces – and they will
be worse than the ones confronting the country now – entirely on the situation in
2018, thus continuing a vicious circle of government irresponsibility and demographic
decline.
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