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The Guardian: End Of The USSR: Visualising How The Former Soviet Cou

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  • The Guardian: End Of The USSR: Visualising How The Former Soviet Cou

    END OF THE USSR: VISUALISING HOW THE FORMER SOVIET COUNTRIES ARE DOING, 20 YEARS ON

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2011/aug/17/ussr-soviet-countries-data

    It's two decades since the USSR broke up. But what happened to those
    Soviet countries? Here's the key data

    What happened to the former USSR? Click image for graphic

    They were three days that shook the world - and shook the Soviet
    Union so hard that it fell apart.

    But for better or worse? Twenty years on from the Soviet coup that
    ultimately ended Mikhail Gorbachev's political career and gave birth
    to 15 new states, The Guardian was keen to explore just how well those
    15 former Soviet republics had performed as independent countries. Our
    data team mined statistics from sources ranging from the World Bank,
    the UNHCR, the UN Crime Trends Survey and the Happy Planet Index to
    compare the performance of the countries. And we combed through the
    OSCE's reports on every election in each country since 1991 to see
    where democracy was taking hold - and where it was not wanted.

    It was in many senses a traumatic break-up. Like a marriage, there was
    so much that was jointly owned that it was hard to make a clean break.

    Industries, military units, whole populations, were scattered across
    an empire, indivisible. Moreover, the economic crisis that led the
    USSR to the brink tilted most of the emergent countries into the
    abyss. GDP fell as much as 50 percent in the 1990s in some republics,
    Russia leading the race to the bottom as capital flight, industrial
    collapse, hyperinflation and tax avoidance took their toll. Almost as
    startling as the collapse was the economic rebound in the 2000s. By
    the end of the decade, some economies were five times as big as they
    were in 1991. High energy prices helped major exporters like Russia,
    Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan, but even perennial stragglers
    like Moldova and Armenia began to grow...

    The Baltic republics

    Since 1990, their economies have grown around fourfold, though not
    without the occasional financial convulsion. Population levels tell
    a different story though: all three countries have lost at least
    10 percent of their populations, and only Estonia has seen a sharp
    increase in life expectancy. Democratic records are exemplary, but
    the countries sit surprisingly low on international measures for
    wellbeing and happiness.

    The EU borderlands

    Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova, the other European former republics,
    have endured rather than relished independence. Ukraine and Moldova
    sustained catastrophic economic contraction through the 1990s when
    their GDP slumped by more than half. Belarus, under the autocratic rule
    of Alexander Lukashenko since 1994, suffered less, but taken together,
    the troika has the weakest economic figures of all post-Soviet
    regions, and populations have dwindled by more than 10 percent and
    life expectancy has fallen. Moldova has the best record of free and
    fair elections, but also became the first Soviet republic to return
    a communist (Vladimir Voronin) to power. Elections in 2009 sparked
    civil unrest. Moldova also hosts to one of the post-Soviet space's
    many frozen conflicts in which Russophones of the Transdniestr region
    sought secession. Ukraine's democratic turning point - the orange
    revolution of 2004 - rapidly gave way to paralysis and stalemate,
    the country deeply divided between russophone east and nationalist
    west. In Belarus, Lukashenko has faced lengthy international isolation
    for crushing opposition and dissent and rigging his own re-election.

    The Caucasus

    Azerbaijan's oil dividend makes it one of the strongest performing
    economies in the post-Soviet space, and it is one of the few former
    Soviet republics with a growing population. Armenia and Georgia have
    both seen incipient growth through the 2000s rudely interrupted by the
    global recession of 2008/09. The frozen conflicts of Nagorno-Karabakh
    (Azerbaijan and Armenia) and Abkhazia (Georgia) have exacted a
    political and economic price, and in Georgia's case a fractured
    relationship with its dominant northern neighbour Russia has resulted
    in the only war between former Soviet republics (2008). Armenia suffers
    from the worst unemployment of all 15 republics, and democratic
    breakthroughs have been few - only Georgia has held free and fair
    elections. Still, life expectancy has risen sharply across the region,
    and infant mortality rates have been reduced impressively.

    Central Asia

    A mixed economic story: Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, with their
    enormous hydrocarbon reserves, have expanded their economies more
    than 400 percent over the period; growth in the other three republics,
    Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan has been more modest.

    Populations have grown in all republics bar Kazakhstan, but life
    expectancy has barely budged: central Asians can still expect to
    die in their 60s. And although these are the happiest post-Soviet
    republics, according to the Happy Planet Index, not one has held a
    genuinely free or fair election since 1990; central Asia is where
    elections are deferred or else won with 99 percent of the vote by
    dictators who lock up their opponents and even ban ballet and name
    a month of the year after their mother (Turkmenistan). In terms of
    leadership, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan are not post-Soviet at all:
    they have simply stuck with the strongmen who led them out of the
    Soviet Union. Turkmenistan did the same until he died in 2006, while
    Tajikistan's Emomali Rahmon (Rahmonov during Soviet times) has run his
    republic uncontested since 1992. Only in Kyrgyzstan has popular will
    bucked the trend: Soviet-era leader Askar Akayev was ousted in 2005,
    as was his successor Kurmanbek Bakiyev five years later.

    Russia

    Under Vladimir Putin, Russia has reversed its dramatic economic decline
    such that its economy is now twice as big as it was in 1990 - and four
    times bigger than in 2000. But that is a rare positive indicator in a
    country that has lost 7 million people since 1991, its life expectancy
    persisting stubbornly below 70 on account of, among other factors,
    chronic problems with drug and alcohol abuse. Russia has the highest
    HIV rate (along with Ukraine), the highest homicide rate and the
    highest prison population of the former Soviet Union. It languishes
    near the bottom of the Global Peace Index. Elections, once pluralistic
    and even commended by the OSCE, are once again foregone conclusions;
    governors, once elected, are now appointed. The 'vertical' of power
    centred on the Kremlin appears as strong as it was in Soviet times.

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