Population gloom worries Russia

Published June 21, 2003

MOSCOW: A fourth successive increase in Russia’s birth-rate is one of several socio-economic indicators suggesting that the country has turned the corner following its post-Soviet collapse, but experts warn that the long-term population outlook remains bleak.

An abnormally high — and increasing — death-rate means that the world’s largest country could see its population slump by one third within the next 50 years, according to worst-case scenarios.

Already in 1991, as Russian leaders prepared to dissolve the Soviet Union, the grounds for disquiet were growing, with the population failing to reproduce itself.

But the worst was yet to come. The trauma of regime change after 70 years of communism, with the loss of bearings, the shock of market reforms, the extreme political instability, symbolized by the 1993 parliamentary revolt and its brutal repression, all combined to depress Russia’s birth-rate.

Despite a substantial influx of immigrants, largely from former Soviet republics, the population has dwindled year by year, standing at 145 million in 2002 compared with 148 million in 1990. By mid-century, if present trends are maintained, it could dip below 100 million, experts have warned.

Over the past 12 years the death-rate has risen inexorably, from 11.2 deaths annually per 1,000 inhabitants in 1990 to 16.2 in 2002.

The main causes of the decline are well known. The collapse of social welfare systems has left the health service unable to cope with the ills that struck Russia in the 1990s, including alcoholism, tuberculosis and AIDS.

These have struck particularly hard at the generation on which so much of Russia’s future depends, the 20-to-30 age group.

The Russian authorities can limit the damage by introducing prevention policies to slow down the death-rate, including an information campaign on the dangers of alcoholism, introduce a dynamic immigration policy, and motivate Russians to live in difficult but resource-rich regions.—AFP

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