April 28, 2005
Russian Officials Warn Of Population Crisis
by Claire Bigg
Up to 60 percent of Russians are believed to be pensioners, children, or disabled -- all of which are outside the workforce
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Moscow, 28 April 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Experts have long warned that political instability, low living standards, and poor health are taking their toll on Russia's population, but politicians have begun to raise the alarm as well.
Geographically, Russia is the largest country in the world, with land stretching from Europe to the Pacific Coast. The Russian population, however, is shrinking at a dramatic rate.
Vladimir Yakovlev, Russia's regional development minister, said recently that the country's population has fallen by 1.7 million over the past two years.
Russia now has about 145 million inhabitants. But if the population continues to decline at the current rate, Yakovlev warned, Russia will have one-third fewer people within 50 years.
Nikita Mkrtchian, a demography expert at the Economic Forecasting Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said Russia's population decline is gaining frightening pace. This, he said, could have dire consequences on the economy.
"According to our calculations, without a migration inflow to Russia, around 2015 the working population will fall by around 1.5 million people a year," Mkrtchian said. "This is a very important figure and it will become a barrier to economic growth."
Russia has an average birthrate of 1.3 children for every woman, a figure far too small to maintain the population at its current level.