Saturday, February 4, 2017

Russians Consume 700 Calories a Day Fewer Now than at the End of Soviet Times



Paul Goble

            Staunton, February 4 – Comparing social well-being across time or among nations is a notoriously difficult challenge, but the most universally accepted one has to do with the amount of calories a population consumes per day. When caloric intake rises, it is commonly assumed, people are living better; when it falls, their fate is just the reverse.

            That  is what makes some new Russian statistics especially disturbing: They show that Russians are now consuming 700 calories a day fewer than they did at the end of Soviet times, according to Isaak Zagaytov and Vladimir Shevchenko in the course of an extended article on for “Literaturnaya gazeta” (lgz.ru/article/-4-6584-1-02-2017/podnyataya-tselina-2/).

            Russian government claims about the situation in agriculture and food consumption ring hollow when one compares the figures for today with those of 25 years ago, the two say. The amount of milk, meat and eggs the country produces per capita have all fallen significantly, although per capita production of potatoes has increased somewhat.

            Further, the amount of land under cultivation has fallen by almost a third and the number of tractors and combines has fallen by a factor of five, two scholars say. And the country lacks the ability to recover its position: it now produces 22 fewer tractors each year than in 1991 and 66 fewer grain combines.   

            But the real meaning of these changes for Russians can be seen by comparing caloric intake, and there the figures are stark: Russians now consumer 700 calories fewer each day than they did in 1991, something that has dropped their world ranking from 7th to 71st place among countries of the world and putting them at the level of “most African countries.”

            That in turn has an impact on the country’s demographic situation. Between 1991 and 2016, as a result of falling fertility rates and rising mortality ones, Russia’s population has declined by more than 20 million – a stark contrast with the last 25 years of Soviet power when the RSFSR’s population rose from 127 million to 148 million.

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