
The migration component in the demographic development of Russia in the post-war period (1951–2020)
Author(s) -
Леонид Леонидович Рыбаковский,
Vladimir Savinkov,
Natalia Kozhevnikova
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
urovenʹ žizni naseleniâ regionov rossii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2713-3397
pISSN - 1999-9836
DOI - 10.19181/lsprr.2021.17.2.7
Subject(s) - population , population growth , human migration , geography , demography , natural population growth , demographic analysis , internal migration , net migration rate , period (music) , economic geography , fertility , sociology , physics , acoustics
The article discusses possible combinations of the impact on the dynamics of the population of migration growth (decline) and natural decline (increase). Variants of combinations with the corresponding values of natural and migration movements are shown using examples of the demographic dynamics of Russia. Reliable information about the migration movement of the population refers only to the time that began in the 50s. It is distributed over periods that differ in the nature of the impact of the reproductive and migration components on demographic dynamics. During these periods spanning seventy years, the country's population increased by almost 44 million. In the first 25 years, there was a migration decline, more than offset by natural population growth. Then migration, along with natural movement, acted as a component of population dynamics. Due to natural growth, the population increased to the 1951 level. by 33.8 million people. The migration component accounted for 10.6 million people. Their ratio was 3/4 to 1/4. It is shown that in the second half of the tenth years of the twenty-first century, Russia entered a difficult demographic time for it, aggravated by the fact that by now in the new abroad the migration potential oriented towards Russia has significantly decreased