----- Original Message ----- 
From: Mrs. Jela Jovanovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: crashlist@lists <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2000 4:31 PM
Subject: [CrashList] Fw: SN1066:For All Russia, Biological Clock is Running Out



----- Original Message -----
From: Elich, Gregory <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: 'siemvesti' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2000 2:49 PM
Subject: SN1066:For All Russia, Biological Clock is Running Out


> New York Times
> December 28, 2000
>
> For All Russia, Biological Clock Is Running Out
>
> By Michael Wines
>
> RYAZAN, Russia - If Ina Chaikovskaya does not have it all, she has more
than
> most women in this ancient military town: brains and pluck, an apartment
and
> a Zhiguli sedan bought with profits from her own business, a pointed wit.
>
> What she does not have, and would like, are a husband and children. At 37,
> she is running out of time.
>
> "There are no normal men," she complained, curled up in jeans and a
sweater
> on a sofa, her companion - a 7-month-old orange tabby cat - staring out
the
> balcony window. "They've all got an inferiority complex because they can't
> earn enough money to support a family. All of them live with their
mothers.
> They all earn 1,000, 1,500 rubles a month," $35 to $55, roughly.
>
> "Who would want to bear a child with a man like that?" she asked.
>
> In Ryazan, a struggling industrial city southeast of Moscow, the answer is
> clear: hardly anybody. In the last decade, the marriage rate here has
> plummeted 30 percent. The divorce rate has leaped 60 percent.
>
> Not surprisingly, the birthrate is down 40 percent, too.
>
> This is the flip side to Russia's decade-long epidemic of rising
mortality:
> a baby bust of alarming speed and size, winnowing the nation's population
by
> millions - and likely to continue for years. Europe's highest- fertility
> country just a decade ago, Russia today is right down there with Spain and
> Italy as the lowest.
>
> New births last year in Russia occurred at the rate of 8.4 per 1,000
people,
> compared with 13.4 in 1990. Put another way, Russia's fertility rate - the
> average number of babies a woman is expected to bear - was just 1.17, down
> from 1.89 in 1990.
>
> The outlook, then, is for a shrinking, aging population when there is a
> crucial need for young people to rejuvenate Russia's farms, re-energize
> industry and rebuild the economy.
>
> The twin trends - rising deaths and declining births - are both rooted in
> the social and public-health upheavals that have swept the nation since
the
> Soviet Union entered its death throes in 1991. Both trends have confounded
> experts, who expected them to be neither as serious nor as prolonged as
they
> have been.
>
> The country's health care has collapsed in the last decade, along with the
> people's health. Public hospitals and clinics are short of money and
> medicine; doctors earn near-poverty wages; infectious diseases like
> tuberculosis are epidemic.
>
> No one doubts the decay has fed a rise in mortality unparalleled in recent
> peacetime history. And no one believes this is merely a medical issue.
> Rather, it is a signal that poverty and stress are eroding the
government's
> ability to care for its own.
>
> Experts, including some at United States intelligence agencies, fear
> deteriorating public health could lead to political upheavals at worst, or
> aid emergencies at best.
>
> Low fertility is the norm in many Western nations, of course, thanks
largely
> to women's emancipation and widespread birth control. Even in Russia,
> birthrates crept slowly downward for decades before the 1990's.
>
> But the latest plunge is different: driven not by women's broader choices,
> but by the fact that many of their options - marital, medical, social,
> financial - have been all but obliterated by the earthquake that destroyed
> the Soviet Union.
>
> Some turnaround surely will occur, but when, nobody knows. Experts once
> believed that Russia's mothers would start bearing children again after
the
> upheavals of the early 1990's. Instead, Russia's birthrate fell another 10
> percent.
>
> By all estimates, the population will continue to shrink. Russia has
already
> lost 3.3 million people since its population peaked in 1992. It will lose
> tens of millions more, experts predict, regardless of whether births pick
> up. The only question is how many.
>
> According to projections prepared at the United Nations, Russia will
> contract in the next five decades from its current 145 million people to
121
> million, the level of 1960.
>
> One Russian demographer, Sergei Yermakov, of the Research Public Health
> Institute, says Russia could shrink to as few as 80 million people, 10
> million fewer than at the time of the Russian Revolution in 1917.
>
> "Children are being put off right now," said Sergei V. Zakharov of the
> Russian Academy of Sciences, perhaps the leading expert on Russian
> fertility. "They are going to end up being born. The question is how
many -
> two or three. But the answer to that question isn't clear."
>
> The Reasons Why
>
> Ms. Chaikovskaya does not think the birth drought will end soon. After a
> decade of social upheaval and poverty, creating a child here seems less an
> act of love, lust or even calculation than it is an act of pure will, and
> perhaps faith.
>
> "No one wants to have babies," she said. "Even the middle class starts
> thinking, Can we afford to have babies? Everybody knows that everything in
> Russia is bad right now."
>
> The province of Ryazan, a Maryland-size patch of flat, black earth etched
> with S-curves by the Moscow River on its way toward the Volga, ranks 82nd
in
> fertility among Russia's 89 provinces. The birthrate - seven babies per
> 1,000 women each year - is one-sixth below the Russian average. In the
past
> two years, one of Ryazan's four maternity hospitals has closed.
>
> Ask women why, as the Family Planning Center in Ryazan asked 500 women who
> sought abortions last year, and one answer dominates: they cannot support
a
> family. They lack money (97 percent), or space in the matchbox flats they
> share with parents (15 percent), or confidence that they can regain their
> jobs after childbirth (8 percent).
>
> Valentina Shevachkina, director of the family planning center, says 15,000
> of the clinic's clients polled from 1997 to 1999 wanted an average of two
> children - "if the government takes some responsibility for their
education
> and upbringing - if the state gave some form of assistance."
>
> The state can't - or won't. Even the $2-a-month stipend guaranteed
everyone
> under 18 is almost $1 billion in arrears nationwide, and marked for a
budget
> cut next year. In parts of this province, it has not been paid since 1998.
>
> If $2 sounds like a pittance, think again. In a region of slender incomes
> and phone-booth apartments, it takes very little to derail motherhood.
>
> Olga Marshalko, 23, a hospital intern in Kasimov, on the Oka River east of
> Ryazan, and her bricklayer husband have postponed pregnancy until they can
> escape their two-room flat in a dormitory.
>
> "Another serious problem is money," she said, "but it wouldn't prevent us
> from having a family." Why not is a puzzle: the Marshalkos take home $46 a
> month.
>
> In Ryazan, 28-year-old Natasha, who declined to give her last name, is 28
> and pregnant with the first of what she hopes will be two children.
>
> She also worries about money, and says her parents will do much of the
> child-rearing, for if she takes the maternity leave ostensibly guaranteed
by
> the government, her employer could replace her quickly.
>
> In Economic Free Fall
>
> For times here are hard.
>
> The Ryazan countryside suffers the same devastating poverty that ravaged
> most rural areas after the Soviet system of collective farming fell apart.
> Meat production has fallen 85 percent in a decade, the grain harvest by
> two-thirds.
>
> In that same period, one-sixth of Ryazan's 500,000 rural residents have
died
> off or fled to the cities. Only a trickle of migrants from even poorer
> places like Ukraine and Kazakhstan has warded off faster shrinkage.
>
> Ryazan, the regal if fraying provincial capital, once grew as the farms
> emptied out. But four years ago it began losing people, too, a victim of
the
> post-Soviet collapse in military production that was the city's financial
> linchpin. Only lately have a few industries like power generation and oil
> refining begun to pick up some of the slack.
>
> When Vladimir Gornov, an associate professor at Ryazan State Technical
> University, surveyed local economic conditions in July, one-fifth of
> respondents said bread was the staple of their diet.
>
> "The baby-boom generation has grown up, and the post-baby-boom generation
> isn't having any babies," he said. "The working-age population in the
> countryside is simply drinking itself to death. I don't know whether it
> would be better for them to have babies or not."
>
> A decade ago, there were an average of 55 births for every 1,000 Ryazan
> women under age 20. Last year the average was 29. The same sort of drop
> occurred among women between 20 and 24, the most productive ages for
Russian
> motherhood.
>
> When Ryazan entered the 1990's, 4 marriages in 10 were ending in divorce.
By
> the decade's end, the figure was almost 6 in 10, mirroring the rise
> throughout Russia.
>
> The reasons are the same as those for the dramatic drop in new marriages.
> Poverty, social upheaval, loosened sexual mores and deteriorating public
> health are not the glue of a good relationship. And while women everywhere
> say a good man is hard to find, this seems especially true in Ryazan,
where
> alcohol-related deaths and the murder rate have rocketed upward.
>
> Those are markers of social breakdown among men, though women are
complicit
> in at least some of that breakdown: one in five Ryazan births last year
was
> out of wedlock, double the rate in 1990 - a factor that breeds poverty and
> instability.
>
> The Issue of Infertility
>
> It was infertility counseling day one recent afternoon and there must have
> been 30 women crowding the sofas outside the Family Planning Center in
> Ryazan.
>
> "We have 2,000 infertile couples being treated here," said Ms.
Shevachkina,
> the director, "and some couples don't go for help at all."
>
> Nobody knows how many Russian couples are infertile: maybe one in 10, as
the
> nation's obstetrician-general says, or one in five, as the Health Ministry
> reported in April, or one in six, as some doctors in Ryazan estimate. The
> comparable rate in the United States is about one in 12.
>
> One legacy left by Soviet medical planners can be summed up in a word:
> abortion. It has had substantial effects on the ability of women to
> conceive. Contraception was never a priority under Communism; if anything,
> it was viewed as anti-growth. Birth control pills were rare; condoms were
> unreliable.
>
> So by the 1980's, the average Russian woman was having nearly four
> abortions. Under President Boris N. Yeltsin, the government opened 260
> family counseling centers and, by subsidizing interuterine devices and
birth
> control pills, cut the overall abortion rate by a third. But the
> Communist-controlled Parliament wiped out the program's budget.
>
> Seventy-five percent of Russian women still rely on abortion to control
> family size, and with subsidies eliminated for contraceptives, that rate
may
> rise.
>
> Ms. Chaikovskaya said Ryazan women are wary of the pill and IUD's, worried
> about side effects. At Maternity House No. 1, the 37-year- old chief
doctor,
> Andrei Turchyannikov, agreed.
>
> However much doctors may advise about these other methods of birth
control,
> "many women think, `Well, if I get pregnant, I can just have an abortion,'
"
> he said. "Our women continue to think abortion is not a frightening thing,
> like getting your tooth fixed."
>
> Such a casual attitude has stark consequences, Ms. Shevachkina said. When
> the family planning center studied 500 women who were unable to have a
> second child, in 1994, they concluded that for half of them, infertility
> stemmed from past abortions.
>
> "I think little has changed since then," she said.
>
> But abortions have declined; if infertility is rising, as many seem to
> believe, the blame probably lies with the spread of Western sexual mores
and
> the explosion of venereal diseases that followed. There, too, some doctors
> believe, men are most at fault.
>
> Aleksandr B. Tereshenko, the specialist in male infertility at the family
> planning center, said half the center's infertility cases now involve men,
> compared with 20 percent earlier in the decade. He blames alcohol, a
> deteriorating diet and venereal disease, from herpes to chlamydia to
> hepatitis, for much of the shift.
>
> Finding Fathers Abroad
>
> This is a nation where bigger has always meant better. And Russian
> politicians, including President Vladimir V. Putin, have seized this year
on
> their nation's dwindling birthrate as evidence that the Russian race is
> besieged, and must be reinvigorated.
>
> Mr. Putin even suggested in November that the secret to Russia's
population
> revival lay in luring back millions of Slavic Russians whose ancestors
were
> dispatched by Stalin to populate the Soviet empire, and who now live in
> independent former Soviet republics.
>
> In fact it is not that simple - and perhaps not quite so dire. Russia has
> been beset by fertility declines again and again in the last century -
> during the war that followed the 1917 Communist takeover, during the
famine
> that followed Stalin's collectivization of farmland in the 1930's, during
> World War II - and suffered no lasting aftereffects.
>
> Births even swelled a bit in the 1980's, as the Kremlin offered women
bigger
> apartments and other incentives to mothers. A small part of the decline in
> the 1990's reflects the fact that women sped up their pregnancy plans to
> reap those benefits, and had fewer babies later on.
>
> Perhaps the best analogy to Russia's current dry spell - a steep drop in
> births during the Depression in the United States - also ended in a
dramatic
> rebound.
>
> "What we saw in the U.S. in the 30's was a very large decline in the total
> fertility rate," said Barbara Anderson, an expert on Russian population
> trends at the University of Michigan. "But I know from looking at cohorts
of
> women at the time that it was virtually total postponement. When things
got
> better, it recovered."
>
> Many of Ms. Chaikovskaya's friends are not prepared to wait. They are
> leaving Ryazan.
>
> She can tick them off, rapid-fire: Olya met an American on the Internet
and
> is happy in the United States. Sveta found a Ukrainian and went to Kiev.
> Lena ran off with a Portuguese pipefitter; so did another Olya. Larisa is
> living with a man in Yugoslavia.
>
> Ms. Chaikovskaya says she is still betting on success in Ryazan.
>
> "I'd like a daughter," she said, and after making a stable life for
herself.
> "Now I'm thinking I can do it. But I'm also thinking it's too late."
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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