
La Russia si trova ad affrontare una popolazione in calo e in invecchiamento e adotta leggi restrittive per combatterla
https://apnews.com/article/russia-birth-rate-population-demographics-putin-63ab4675ff6d4e415630b7c830799077
di Any-Original-6113
13 commenti
For a quarter century, President Vladimir Putin has faced the specter of Russia’s shrinking and aging population.
In 1999, a year before he came to power, the number of babies born in Russia plunged to its lowest recorded level. In 2005, Putin said the demographic woes needed to be resolved by maintaining “social and economic stability.”
In 2019, he said the problem still “haunted” the country.
As recently as Thursday, he told a Kremlin demographic conference that increasing births was “crucial” for Russia.
Putin has launched initiatives to encourage people to have more children — from free school meals for large families to awarding Soviet-style “hero-mother” medals to women with 10 or more children.
“Many of our grandmothers and great-grandmothers had seven, eight, and even more children,” Putin said in 2023. “Let’s preserve and revive these wonderful traditions. Having many children and a large family must become the norm.”
At first, births in Russia grew with its economic prosperity, from 1.21 million babies born in 1999 to 1.94 million in 2015.
But those hard-won gains are crumbling against a backdrop of financial uncertainty, the war in Ukraine, an exodus of young men and opposition to immigration.
Russia’s population has fallen from 147.6 million in 1990 — the year before the USSR collapsed — to 146.1 million this year, according to Russia’s Federal Statistics Service. Since the 2014 illegal annexation of Crimea, it has included the peninsula’s population of about 2 million, as well as births and deaths there, in its data.
The population also is significantly older. In 1990, 21.1% was 55 or older, government data said. In 2024, that figure was 30%.
Since the 2015 peak, the number of births has fallen annually, and deaths are now outpacing births. There were only 1.22 million live births last year — marginally above the 1999 low. Demographer Alexei Raksha reported the number of babies born in Russia in February 2025 was the lowest monthly figure in over two centuries
Russia is trying new restrictions to halt the backslide and embrace what it calls “traditional family values” with laws banning the promotion of abortion and “child-free ideology” and outlawing all LGBTQ+ activism.
Officials believe such values are “a magic wand” for solving demographic problems, said Russian feminist scholar Sasha Talaver.
In the government’s view, women might be financially independent, but they should be “willing and very excited to take up this additional work of reproduction in the name of patriotism and Russian strength,” she said.
Harsh demographic history
In Russia, as in much of the West, shrinking births are usually linked with economic turbulence. Young couples in cramped apartments, unable to buy their own homes or who fear for their jobs, usually have less confidence they can afford raising a child.
But Russia is saddled with a harsh demographic history.
About 27 million Soviet citizens died in World War II, diminishing the male population dramatically.
As the country was beginning to recover, the Soviet Union collapsed, and births tumbled again.
The number of Russian women in their 20s and early 30s is small, said Jenny Mathers of the University of Aberystwyth in Wales, leaving authorities “desperate to get as many babies as possible out of this much smaller number of women.”
Although Russia has not said how many troops have been killed in Ukraine, Western estimates have put the dead in the hundreds of thousands. When the war began, many young Russians moved abroad — some for ideological reasons like escaping a crackdown on dissent or to avoid military service.
“You’ve got a much-diminished pool of potential fathers in a diminished pool of potential mothers,” Mathers said. That is a particular problem for Putin, who has long linked population and national security, she said.
Some family-friendly initiatives are popular, like cash certificates for parents that can go toward pensions, education or a subsidized mortgage.
Others are controversial, such as one-time payments of about $1,200 for pregnant teenagers in some regions. Officials say these aim to support vulnerable mothers, but critics say they encourage such pregnancies.
Still other programs seem mostly symbolic. Since 2022, Russia has created state holidays like Family, Love and Fidelity Day in July, and Pregnant Women’s Day -– celebrated on April 7 and Oct. 7.
Last year, Russia’s fertility rate — the average number of children born per woman — was 1.4, state media reported. That’s well below the 2.1 replacement rate for the population, and slightly lower than the U.S. figure of 1.6 released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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And kidnapping Ukrainian kids to combat it
I’d suggest stopping trying to conquer your neighbours and losing 100.000’s in deaths. Well over a million in wounded and well over a million in people who flee the country.
A, therefore we cannot start from a base of below average women and force them to give birth, as mathematics does not allow it.
Please tell all of Italy
Ireland’s abortion restrictions have backfired for their population push, in that now some women skip children because they know Irish doctors would let the die rather than save them from birth complications.
Russia’s abortion restrictions have not yet reached this point, but you’d expect some extra deaths occur, and slightly discurage raising children. It’ll primarily be the economics and corruption that restrain raising children though.
Anyway..
We need population decline both for ecological reasons and social inequality. [Inequality only ever declines significantly when either the workforce shrinks, or lots of capital gets destoryed](https://frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/the-great-leveller-a-conversation-with-walter-scheidel-on-inequality-and-apocalypse/#comments)
[](https://frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/the-great-leveller-a-conversation-with-walter-scheidel-on-inequality-and-apocalypse/#comments)
What about stopping the killing of citizens?
Maybe he could stop sending his own people to prison for nothing, and stop killing innocent people in a stupid war, that is only for his own ego.
not a just russia problem. declining births is a global phenomenon
>In the government’s view, women might be financially independent, but they should be “willing and very excited to take up this additional work of reproduction in the name of patriotism and Russian strength,” she said.
I’m sure that will work out great. Can’t help but have a little schadenfreude at them arguing against reality and failing miserably.
>Some family-friendly initiatives are popular, like cash certificates for parents that can go toward pensions, education or a subsidized mortgage.
This is the part I don’t quite get. Clearly, someone actually tried with workable policy. But then they revert to the nonsense above. It’s almost sad – Russia is *capable* of sensible policy, just not without pushing “patriotic” nonsense at the same time.
Ya know, throwing young men into a grinder so they a) die at a massively increased rate and b) can’t have children anymore isn’t precisely helpful. Might want to check out why France talked of the “classes creuses” after WW1.
Desperation is setting in in Russia, amongst the War Mongers, like Putin, Medvedev, Lavrov, and the heathens in the Kremlin, and their war mongering Generals.
I’m sure I saw a graph showing the Russian population swells and drops in waves from wars and losses and as the decline begins they seem to go to war or invade something to try dealing with the financial/economic issue of it because they have spikes and slumps in age groups