Experts attribute the decline to the pandemic, which has claimed many lives, while migration and low birth rates have also played a role.
Russia’s population shrank by around half a million last year, its first contraction in 15 years, the country’s statistics agency said on Friday.
Russia has 146.2 million inhabitants, according to the Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper, citing the agency.
Experts attributed the decline mainly to the pandemic.
There were 229,700 more deaths between January and November 2020 than in the same period the previous year, an excess mortality rate of more than 13%, the agency said.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has long called for more efforts to support population growth. Last year he blamed the trend on low income.
Experts say other causes are the migration of younger and well-educated people abroad and the low birth rate.
Similar trends
This month, statistics for Poland and the UK showed similar trends.
On Tuesday, statistics for 2020 showed that the number of deaths in Poland was increasing to a level not seen since World War II and that births were falling sharply, trends attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic and described by some as a population crisis. .
The data reported by the daily Dziennik Gazeta Prawna on Tuesday came from a state register that includes weekly births and deaths.
Commenting on data released in December by state agency Statistics Poland for 11 months of 2020, economist Rafal Mundry said the number of deaths was the highest since World War II and the number of births the lowest in 15 years.
“We have a huge demographic crisis,” Mundry said on Twitter.
In 2019, some 30,000 people died in Poland each month on average. In November, when COVID-19 cases increased, the country recorded nearly 60,400 deaths.
In the UK, a study published on January 14 suggested it may be the biggest population decline since World War II, citing the pandemic.
Faced with poor job opportunities, expats have left the UK in large numbers, according to the UK Center of Excellence for Economic Statistics (ESCoE).
Around 1.3 million foreign-born people left the UK from July 2019 to September 2020, the statement said.
Meanwhile, Brexit also appeared to have an impact on motivating people to leave Britain, with some interviewed by Al Jazeera citing the UK’s divorce from the European Union as a push factor.
In London, according to ESCoE, up to 700,000 people left the capital during the 14 months analyzed.