Vladimir Putin promises £33 billion to boost birth rate
Vladimir Putin has promised to spend £33 billion to boost the country's flagging population by up to a third over the next four years, during a two-and-a-half hour speech that appeared to gear him up for a 2012 presidential run.
Putin's speech to the State Duma included a litany of self-praise and ambitious goals for the future Photo: REUTERS
By Our Foreign Staff 12:34PM BST 20 Apr 2011
Mr Putin insisted that that Russia must be strong to fend off foreign threats and lauded a long list of his own achievements, a show of muscle seen as a signal that the powerful leader intends to reclaim the country's presidency next year.
He laid out an ambitious program of weapons modernisation in an annual address to parliament that sounded much like a campaign speech, promising to spend the equivalent of £430 billion by 2020.
The speech's broad scope — ranging from long-term economic goals to national security and defence — underlined Mr Putin's role as the nation's No. 1 leader, though his successor as president, Dmitry Medvedev, technically has far broader powers.
"The nation needs decades of stable and calm development without any sharp movements and ill-conceived experiments" based on liberal policy, the 58-year-old leader said.
On the country's declining population, he pledged to boost the country's birth rate by between 25 and 30 per cent by 2015.
"According to preliminary calculations, between 2011 and 2015 some 1.5 trillion roubles will be invested in demography projects," he said. "First, we expect the average life expectancy to reach 71 years. Second, we expect to increase the birth rate by 25 to 30 per cent in comparison to the 2006 birth rate."
Under the plan, the government would build more affordable housing for families, promote a healthy lifestyle and stop the country's brain drain. Previous schemes have seen cash incentives given to parents with two or more children to be spent on housing and education.
His speech to the State Duma included a litany of self-praise and ambitious goals for the future. He claimed credit for quickly taking Russia out of the global financial crisis and promised that it would become one of the world's top five economies by 2020. Russia is currently ranked as the world's sixth biggest economy.
Mr Putin said that a key lesson from the financial crisis was that the nation must be "self-reliant independent and strong" to resist outside pressure.
"The weakness of economy and the state, a lack of immunity to outside shocks inevitably become a threat for national sovereignty," Mr Putin said. "In the modern world, those who are weak will get unambiguous advice from foreign visitors which way to go and what policy course to pursue."
Mr Putin said that the national economy rose by four per cent last year and said that the growth rate will accelerate this year allowing to fully compensate for losses from the crisis by 2012.
Mr Putin vowed to modernise national industries and develop new technologies to reduce Russia's dependence on oil, gas and other raw materials, venturing into Mr Medvedev's favorite turf. He also made pledges to combat corruption similar to those Mr Medvedev has made since taking the country's helm — though he hasn't made much progress.
Winning frequent applause from a parliament dominated by his United Russia party, Mr Putin boasted of hikes in pensions and other social payments as well as increases of government spending on education and science.
He promised to stem Russia's population decline by supporting young families and improving health care, and pledged support to industries and agriculture.
Mr Putin put a particular emphasis on boosting defence and laid out ambitious plans to procure new weapons for the military. He said that production of missiles will double starting from 2013 compared to the current level and that a massive navy modernisation program will be launched.
Mr Putin, who was Russia's president in from 2000 to 2008, groomed his longtime aide and protege, Mr Medvedev, to succeed him. Both men have said they would decide later who would run for president in March 2012, but Mr Putin is widely expected to take the top job back.