rgag12 said:
DTP02 said:
Can one of y'all who've been following this more closely than I have for the past several months answer the question I have when I hear about Russia being on a war footing going forward and drastically expanding its army?
Where are they going to get the bodies? Don't they have a declining demographic situation which has even exacerbated by all of the military age males they've lost in the conflict so far?
Russia has 140 million people in it currently, way more than Ukraine. 140 million people, demographics aside, is still a lot of people to draw from for military service.
The demographic problems you hear in regards to Russia, China, Japan, etc. take decades to manifest itself. Russia probably won't feel the economic sting of its demographics a very very long time. Also, the casualties in this war aren't crippling for either side, especially Russia. Russia may have lost more people than Ukraine, but again their population is so much bigger than Ukraine's that it doesn't matter strategically.
Russia's demographics are not going to limit their ability to throw bodies at bullets in Ukraine. But they already had a bad demographic crisis starting to affect their economy, and losing hundreds of thousands of able-bodied men to the war and causing a million or more to flee the country to avoid being conscripted is just going to speed that up. Add to that they have a terrible life expectancy, a very unhealthy population with inadequate health care to deal with it, and that they are pulling conscripts for the war from areas that are heavy into agriculture or industrial production and you are playing jenga with the base of their economy.
Nobody is saying it will affect them enough to change the trajectory of the war in the next year or three, but the damage they are doing to their demographics is absolutely going to accelerate the hard times coming for their economy. They are pulling resources away from production in ways that are just starting to be felt now, but that will heavily impact their economy and every day life in the near future.
That war time footing for their economy may result in short term growth that is being touted by Putin as a basis to claim the sanctions aren't hurting them, but it is an economic mirage that will absolutely exact a long term price if they try to maintain it long term.