Paul Goble
Staunton,
Oct. 24 – The 2020 Russian census has already been postponed three times
because of the pandemic, but it should have been postponed yet again not only because
of the impact of the coronavirus but because of the incompetent way it is being
carried out and the massive resistance of Russians to it, especially in big
cities, Aleksey Raksha says.
The
independent Russian demographer says that school teachers and university
students have been forced to work as census takers but are resisting because
while they are supplied with masks, most of the people they contact who do open
their doors to them aren’t wearing any and thus they may contract the virus (severreal.org/a/perepis-epohi-pandemii/31526172.html).
That
is leading to resistance especially among university students, on the one hand,
and to a repetition of shortcomings in early post-Soviet censuses where census
takers simply filled in answers without in fact making contact with those they
are supposed to survey. Raksha suggests they feel justified in doing so because
so many Russians won’t talk to them.
Russians
don’t trust the state and don’t trust those who ask questions and so feel free
to not answer the door when the census takers appear. But all this means that
the current census will be worse than in 2002 and 2010 and much worse than
those carried out in Soviet times, the demographer says.
Rosstat
officials know all this, he continues; but they aren’t the ones making the
decisions. The demographers there have been reduced to technicians, and their
advice on the census is limited to such questions. Choices about when to have a
census and whom to use to carry it out are made much further up the political
pyramid.
According
to Raksha, the powers that be in the government and the Kremlin do not
recognize the importance of having good information and thus are not that
alarmed at the prospect that for the next ten years of more, they will be
forced to operate without the kind of information that only a census can
provide.
But
that will lead to mistakes and to efforts to get better data by smaller
surveys. But what should happen, Raksha concludes, is that the entire census
should be cancelled and repeated once the demographic and political conditions
permit. When those things will be true, however, is anything but clear.
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