senheiser
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'Dying' Russia's Birth Rate Is Now Higher Than The United States'
This was not the headline that the Center for Disease Controls National Center for Health Statistics gave its recent release of provisional fertility data for 2012. However, if you compare the most recent CDC data with Rosstat data on Russian births you see that, for the first time in a very long time, in 2012 Russias birth rate actually exceeded that of the United States. This is, to put it mildly, a significant reversal from the not too distant past when the US had a birth rate that was as much as 75% higher than Russias. As you can see, the speed and scale of the convergence is impressive
Since 2008, the Russian birth rate has increased by about 10% while the United States has slumped by about 9%. At first glance this might sound surprising: didnt Russias economy perform abysmally during the financial crisis? Isnt their economy going straight towards a hard landing? But its really not much of a mystery when you really think about it: Russia, and particularly its labor market, rebounded from the financial crisis very quickly. The sorts of metrics which would be a reasonable guide to family formation and births, particularly the unemployment rate and the average real wage, are at historically good levels in Russia. Essentially, Russian wages have never been higher and unemployment has never been lower. Meanwhile, in the United States, wages are stagnant and unemployment is way above its long-term trend. This sort of economic malaise has had a predictably depressive effect on fertility.
What is not particularly relevant for the discussion are the personalities of Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin: neither deserves much credit (or blame) for their respective countrys performance. Fertility is notoriously immune to state interventions, and while Im sure someone will show up in the comments and say that Russias strong performance is solely due to the maternal capital program the reality is that most of the change is due to structural demographic and economic factors that are incredibly difficult to change. So Russias relatively good performance doesnt automatically vindicate Putin and the US poor performance doesnt prove that Obama is awful.
Its also worth noting that Russias birth rate will, in the not too distant future, start to decrease as the tiny cohort born during the chaos of the 1990′s comes into prime childbearing years and replaces the relatively large cohort born during the 1980′s. Its unlikely, then, that Russias birth rate is going to exceed that of the United States for very long: there is, at most, a 4-5 year window before structural factors take over and reduce Russias rate while bolstering that of the United States.
But I nonetheless want to highlight the enormous change in relative performance between Russia and the United States because 1) its something thats not well recognized and 2) strongly suggests that Russia is not some bizarre and indecipherable dying nation but is actually dealing with a number of demographic problems that every other advanced country is also dealing with. A lot of people pointed at Russias naturally shrinking population and basically said what a wretched and awful place: they cant even maintain their own numbers! The fact that the white population is now naturally shrinking in the US should hopefully make people just a little less willing to stereotype the Russians and a little more willing to honestly discuss issues of demography by engaging with hard data.
This was not the headline that the Center for Disease Controls National Center for Health Statistics gave its recent release of provisional fertility data for 2012. However, if you compare the most recent CDC data with Rosstat data on Russian births you see that, for the first time in a very long time, in 2012 Russias birth rate actually exceeded that of the United States. This is, to put it mildly, a significant reversal from the not too distant past when the US had a birth rate that was as much as 75% higher than Russias. As you can see, the speed and scale of the convergence is impressive
Since 2008, the Russian birth rate has increased by about 10% while the United States has slumped by about 9%. At first glance this might sound surprising: didnt Russias economy perform abysmally during the financial crisis? Isnt their economy going straight towards a hard landing? But its really not much of a mystery when you really think about it: Russia, and particularly its labor market, rebounded from the financial crisis very quickly. The sorts of metrics which would be a reasonable guide to family formation and births, particularly the unemployment rate and the average real wage, are at historically good levels in Russia. Essentially, Russian wages have never been higher and unemployment has never been lower. Meanwhile, in the United States, wages are stagnant and unemployment is way above its long-term trend. This sort of economic malaise has had a predictably depressive effect on fertility.
What is not particularly relevant for the discussion are the personalities of Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin: neither deserves much credit (or blame) for their respective countrys performance. Fertility is notoriously immune to state interventions, and while Im sure someone will show up in the comments and say that Russias strong performance is solely due to the maternal capital program the reality is that most of the change is due to structural demographic and economic factors that are incredibly difficult to change. So Russias relatively good performance doesnt automatically vindicate Putin and the US poor performance doesnt prove that Obama is awful.
Its also worth noting that Russias birth rate will, in the not too distant future, start to decrease as the tiny cohort born during the chaos of the 1990′s comes into prime childbearing years and replaces the relatively large cohort born during the 1980′s. Its unlikely, then, that Russias birth rate is going to exceed that of the United States for very long: there is, at most, a 4-5 year window before structural factors take over and reduce Russias rate while bolstering that of the United States.
But I nonetheless want to highlight the enormous change in relative performance between Russia and the United States because 1) its something thats not well recognized and 2) strongly suggests that Russia is not some bizarre and indecipherable dying nation but is actually dealing with a number of demographic problems that every other advanced country is also dealing with. A lot of people pointed at Russias naturally shrinking population and basically said what a wretched and awful place: they cant even maintain their own numbers! The fact that the white population is now naturally shrinking in the US should hopefully make people just a little less willing to stereotype the Russians and a little more willing to honestly discuss issues of demography by engaging with hard data.