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View Full Version : Interesting Russian policy: does it indicate a greater problem?



Gan
09-23-2006, 12:29 PM
A friend of mine sent me this article...

Russians are urged to take the afternoon off, go home and make a baby
By Adrian Blomfield in Moscow

(Filed: 22/09/2006)



The governor of a Russian province gave workers an afternoon off and told them to go home and multiply in the most direct attempt yet by officials seeking to tackle the country's growing depopulation crisis.


Bureaucrats have been dreaming up ever more imaginative schemes to help reverse the trend ever since President Vladimir Putin identified Russia's demographic crisis – caused in part by soaring levels of alcoholism – as the country's biggest threat.


But few have been quite as blunt as Sergey Morozov, the governor of Ulyanovsk, a depressed region on the Volga.

In exchange for an afternoon of state-sponsored passion, his "Give birth to a patriot" campaign launched last week offers parents who give birth next year on June 12, Russia's Independence Day, a range of incentives from a fridge or washing machine to a four-wheel-drive vehicle, depending on how many children the couple already has.


The Kremlin is offering even more substantial inducements. In a state of the nation address in May that was redolent of the Soviet era, Mr Putin encouraged Russians to make more babies and promised to give £5,000 to every mother who gives birth to a second child.


It is unclear how many of Ulyankovsk's residents took up Mr Morozov's offer, but the governor is convinced that such strategies are essential if the decline is to be reversed. Russia's 142 million population is dwindling faster than any other on Earth with 793,000 more deaths than births in 2004, according to the Centre for Demography.



Source
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=0SE4K0XR401LBQFIQMFCFGGAVCBQ YIV0?xml=/news/2006/09/22/wrussia22.xml

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What concerns me is that Russia's neighbor to the south has the OPPOSITE problem. Wars are fought for many reasons, borders and resources are but one of them. Russia has expansive borders, a dwindling population, and a greater supply of natural resources than China. China is expending its natural resources at quite a rapid pace and an overpopulation issue with regards to its available space.



This reminds me of Tom Clancy's book "The Bear and the Dragon". I think I'll grab it off the shelf and give it a re-read.

Skirmisher
09-23-2006, 01:54 PM
Declining birthrates have been a not loudly trumpeted but growing issue for most western/indistrialized countries for some time.

I looked up that on NYTimes website and came up with these Headlines from the first page of results.

The quote is from the last article mentioned.

Empty Maternity Wards Imperil a Dwindling Germany
By MARK LANDLER Published: November 18, 2004

World Briefing | Asia: Japan: Sex. It's Just What The Doctor Ordered.
Published: June 23, 2006

In Northern Italy, the Agony of Aging Not So Gracefully By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, International Herald Tribune
Published: September 22, 2006

Growth Pace Slackens in Singapore
By WAYNE ARNOLD Published: October 12, 2004

Vibrant Cities Find One Thing Missing: Children
By TIMOTHY EGAN Published: March 24, 2005


Between 2003 and 2004, only six states had an increase in their elementary school population, the census bureau reported in March.

In that sense, the United States is following Europe and the rest of the industrial world, where birthrates now rarely exceed the rate needed to replace the population.

''If you took immigrants out of the equation, the United States would be like the rest of Europe,'' said Phillip Longman, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, a public policy research organization in Washington. He is the author of ''The Empty Cradle: How Falling Birth Rates Threaten World Prosperity and What To Do About It.''

TheEschaton
09-23-2006, 02:31 PM
Another reason for immigration!

-TheE-