Economist - Russia Survey

by Andy on May 21, 2004

The Economist has published a survey of Russia. The first article is available for free, but for the rest you’ll either need a website subscription, or to actually go out and buy the magazine itself.

Although I haven’t really had chance to look through it properly, I’d really recommend you check it out - the Economist’s surveys are usually pretty well researched and informative.

The one thing that surprised me from the first article was the map of Russian population. While Russia on a whole is losing people - the Far Eastern population is down almost 16% since 1989 - the Southern (Caucasus) region is rapidly growing - its population rose by almost 12% between 1989 and 2002. Given the large Islamic population in the area, I think the change in the population balance is likely to pose some pretty serious problems in the mid-term future for Russian territorial cohesiveness.


{ 1 comment }

Randy McDonald 05.23.04 at 6:45 pm

My impression is that the Southern Region’s populatuion has grown sharply also because of massive immigration, particularly from the independent states of the South Caucasus. Armenians now apparently form a quarter of Krasnodar’s population, for instance.

Comments on this entry are closed.