Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Where Are Educated Young People from Russia’s Eastern Regions Headed and Why. / Gvozdeva, E. S.; Gvozdeva, G. P.
In: Regional Research of Russia, Vol. 15, No. 1, 12.07.2025, p. 81-92.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Where Are Educated Young People from Russia’s Eastern Regions Headed and Why
AU - Gvozdeva, E. S.
AU - Gvozdeva, G. P.
N1 - The study was carried out under state assignment project 5.2.1.3. (0260-2021-0001) “Actors, Drivers, Consequences of Social Changes in Modern Society: Theory and Empirics,” registration no. 121040100280-1.
PY - 2025/7/12
Y1 - 2025/7/12
N2 - Abstract: By their choice of place of study and work, young people significantly determine the human potential of Russia and its individual territories. It drives migration processes and thus contributes to concentration of half the country’s population in one-third of its regions. Young people strive to receive high incomes, employment opportunities in innovative areas, and conditions for a long and healthy life. The problem of depopulation of the regions of Siberia and the Far East is the result of the weak regulatory influence of socioeconomic institutions that are unable to provide compensatory incentives for retaining the local population. Some eastern regions are more active than the national average in participating in replenishment of the population and youth education, but they receive fewer dividends from these investments due to the migration of young people to the central and southern regions of the country and abroad. This asymmetry, when human potential is created in some regions and realized in others, requires immediate overcoming, including within the framework of national projects aimed at diversifying the regional economies of Asian Russia.
AB - Abstract: By their choice of place of study and work, young people significantly determine the human potential of Russia and its individual territories. It drives migration processes and thus contributes to concentration of half the country’s population in one-third of its regions. Young people strive to receive high incomes, employment opportunities in innovative areas, and conditions for a long and healthy life. The problem of depopulation of the regions of Siberia and the Far East is the result of the weak regulatory influence of socioeconomic institutions that are unable to provide compensatory incentives for retaining the local population. Some eastern regions are more active than the national average in participating in replenishment of the population and youth education, but they receive fewer dividends from these investments due to the migration of young people to the central and southern regions of the country and abroad. This asymmetry, when human potential is created in some regions and realized in others, requires immediate overcoming, including within the framework of national projects aimed at diversifying the regional economies of Asian Russia.
KW - Far East
KW - Siberia
KW - depopulation
KW - education
KW - human development
KW - migration
KW - youth
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/478a955a-fee6-3d28-83fc-7f2b6e52a42a/
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=105010640531&origin=inward
U2 - 10.1134/S2079970525600180
DO - 10.1134/S2079970525600180
M3 - Article
VL - 15
SP - 81
EP - 92
JO - Regional Research of Russia
JF - Regional Research of Russia
SN - 2079-9705
IS - 1
ER -
ID: 68535811