Bolick suggests that the lack of acceptable male mates for a well-educated and well-employed female could be a "crisis in gender."
She compares the current generation of women with that in an earlier gender crisis after the Civil War.
Clearly, the options and expectations for white women in the South were forever changed.
Bolick then goes on to mention Russia in the context of a gender crisis that originated in the massive killing of World War II. Russia and its unusual demographics have been discussed previously—most recently in Russia and Its People: A Death Spiral? The effect on Russian society from the change in gender ratio could be much greater than that attributed to the deaths in the US Civil War.
The following charts are from the UN population database. They provide a summary of the breakout of male and female populations by age group and as a percentage of the total population. Data are presented for Russia, Germany, and Japan for the years 1950 and 2010. Keep in mind the World War II came only 25 years after the bloodshed of World War I. Some of the demographic fine structure will be a result of that conflict in the cases of Russia and Germany.
The data from 1950 should be a good representation of the post-war population. There are vertical dotted lines to indicate where there is a surplus of one gender over the other. Bolick quotes war casualties as being 20 million men and 7 million women. The gender differences that resulted in the young to middle aged adult categories are enormous. In some age groups there are almost twice as women as men—potentially a much larger effect than was observed in the US after the Civil War.
The demographic hole caused by the war is obvious, but the net effect, particularly the deficit of males, is smaller in Germany than in Russia.
Japan seems to have the least perturbation from the conflict and a relatively small male deficit.
With the worst fighting occurring as the German and Russian armies moved back and forth over the Russian landscape, it is not surprising that Russia suffered the worst. This enormous loss of life and the extreme deficit in males required some action on the part of the rulers. Bolick provides this account.
These are commonsense actions that might exist in any society. However, Russia felt a need to go further.
This latter move may have been necessary, but it is not an example of enlightened social engineering.
Bolick points out that there are local conditions that are causing extreme gender differentials in Russia even today.
Requests to legalize polygamy in Russia?
One has to conclude that if one desires to create a bizarre and dysfunctional society, Russia provides the perfect example. One begins with two catastrophic wars, a few generations of Soviet rule, an existential financial crisis, and then, with Putin, another generation of Soviet rule.
The last 100 years have been tough on Russia. Let’s wish them the best.
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ReplyDeleteAnd now a disastrous & unnecessary invasion of a neighbour, sacrificing Russian young men for Putin's ego.
ReplyDelete