Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 25 – Svetlana
Saltanova, who summaries research by scholars at Moscow’s Higher School of
Economics for the IQ portal, has assembled 19 statistics from the works she has
presented over the past year and thereby provided a useful portrait of life in
the Russian Federation this year (iq.hse.ru/news/326148307.html).
They are:
·
23
percent of Russians borrow money or otherwise use credit, a third the
percentage of Americans and half that of Europeans
·
68
percent of Russians do not now sort their trash and do not plan to.
·
20
percent of Russians know at least one foreign language, compared to more than
65 percent of Europeans.
·
42
percent of online petitions launched by residents in central Russia achieve
their goals; only two percent of those in the Far East and only one percent of
those in the North Caucasus do.
·
41
percent of Russians feel that they are not well off.
·
48
percent of Russians live from day to day without any serious plans about the
future.
·
68
percent of Russian young people feel themselves happy but only 35.4 percent
want their future families to be like the ones they grew up in.
·
14.5
percent of Orthodox believers are guided in their voting by what their priests
recommend.
·
6.4
percent of Russian family budgets are spent on relaxation.
·
7
percent of Russian NGOs employ fundraising specialists.
·
The
number of medical facilities in Russia has declined by 60 percent over the last
decade as a result of Putin’s healthcare “optimization.”
·
Higher educational institutions in Russia with
graduate educations have declined in number by 25 percent over the last six
years, and the number of graduate students has fallen by 22 percent.
·
60
percent of the instructors at Russian higher educational institutions are women,
the highest share in the world. In the US, only 49 percent of instructors are.
·
21
percent of the higher educational institutions of the Russian Federation are in
Moscow, and a quarter of all Russian university students are in the two
capitals.
·
72
percent of pupils in Moscow aged 11 to 16 experience cyberbullying.
·
57
percent of 14 to 18-year-old Russians view the police as harsh.
·
20
percent of Russian orphans were adopted in 2019, up from two percent in 2005.
·
29
percent of Russian pensioners over 65 live alone. Nine out of ten of these are
female.
·
27
percent of Russian smokers acknowledge that they violate the law against
smoking in public places.
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