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  • 21st century problems

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    November 22, 2004, Monday

    21ST CENTURY PROBLEMS

    SOURCE: Novoe Vremya, No. 47, November 21, 2004, p. 10

    by Nikolai Popov

    In evaluating the most pressing problems facing Russia and the world
    as a whole, our people come up with various priority rankings for
    ourselves and the rest of the world. The majority, however, viewed
    one particular problem as the top priority: poverty. Forty-seven
    percent of respondents name poverty as Russia's major problem; 49%
    say it is the major problem for the world as a whole. Subsequent
    priorities differ. According to 45% of respondents, Russia's second
    most important problem is rising prices, or inflation. For the world
    as whole, respondents put environmental protection in second place -
    named as the biggest problem by 13%. Finally, Russian respondents
    name "conquering AIDS, malaria, and other major diseases" as the
    third most important problem for the world as a whole; for Russia,
    third place goes to unemployment, named by 37% of respondents.

    Further down the ranking of global problems, Russian respondents
    named the following: reducing child mortality (7%), creating an
    organization for helping poor countries (4%), better healthcare for
    mothers (3%), eliminating illiteracy (3%), and gender equality (1%).

    The selection of problems to be ranked was compiled by the United
    Nations, which has set the goal of resolving them by 2015.

    After the top three, respondents named the following problems as the
    most important for Russia: drug abuse (33%), rising crime rates
    (29%), weakness of state authority (20%), greed and bribe-taking
    among the bureaucracy and state officials (15%), housing and
    utilities problems like heating, water, and electricity supplies
    (12%), delays in payment of wages or pensions (7%), international
    problems (3%), and interethnic problems within Russia (3%). The total
    adds up to over 100% because respondents were allowed to pick two or
    three choices from the list of domestic problems.

    As a recent international Gallup poll indicated, most of the world's
    population views eliminating poverty and hunger as the top priority:
    44% of respondents named this as the main problem. The highest
    percentage of respondents named this as the top priority in the
    Middle East (62%); the lowest percentage (29%) in North America,
    where people are evidently poorly-informed about poverty and hunger
    in other parts of the world. The global poll's second priority was
    creating an organization for helping poor countries (12%), followed
    by 10% each for environmental protection, fighting disease, and
    ensuring universal basic education. These average figures conceal
    some strong disparities between responses from various parts of the
    world. For example, environmental protection was named as the top
    priority by 21% of respondents in the Asia-Pacific, but only 1% in
    Africa, where fighting disease scored 22%.

    Actually, whether any particular problem is given priority in any
    particular country depends on various considerations, frequently
    contradictory. In East-Central Europe, where economies still lag
    behind those of the developed world, only 5% of respondents consider
    it very important to create an organization for helping poor
    countries. The people of East-Central Europe aren't counting on
    getting any such aid themselves, but they are not yet prepared to
    participate as donors. In these countries, fighting epidemic diseases
    is viewed as more important than the global average response: 14% of
    respondents in East-Central Europe name this problem as the most
    important. And this problem is viewed as very serious in some
    countries: 26% of respondents in Ukraine named it as the world's top
    priority, 21% of respondents in Estonia, and 20% in Lithuania.

    In general, respondents in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union
    are similar in their evaluation of their own problems, although there
    are some substantial differences. In all these countries, the top
    three problems named as the most serious are the following: poverty,
    inflation, and unemployment. In some countries, respondents give
    unemployment second or even first priority among their concerns:
    Armenia - 82%, top priority; Kyrgyzstan - 69%, second place;
    Lithuania - 62%, top priority; Bulgaria - 63%, second place. Drug
    abuse is gradually pulling ahead of corruption as the most serious
    problem: 35% of respondents in Kazakhstan name it as their top
    concern, 33% in Russia, and 23% in Ukraine. At the same time, only
    11% of respondents in Moldova and 5% in Armenia name drug abuse as
    the top priority.

    Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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