In response, the government began Maternity Capital, a scheme providing women with one-time payments for having children, in 2007. The lump sum women are entitled to currently stands at 466,617 rubles (€4,682) for a first child and 616,617 rubles (€6,188) for a second, and while some Duma deputies have suggested that only women who have their first child before 30 — or only those who have multiple children, as was the case before 2020 — be eligible for the scheme, there’ no suggestion that Russian politicians are turning their backs on natalism.
Russian politicians have, in fact, been making increasingly radical pro-natalist and often anti-feminist statements over the past year. Health Minister Mikhail Murashko has condemned “women’s vicious desire to prioritise their careers over having children”, while some members of the State Duma have even discouraged women from pursuing higher education. Women’s rights have also come under attack, with private clinics no longer permitted to perform abortions in several Russian regions, and legislation being considered to institute a similar ban at the federal level.
Who are the key proponents of pro-natalism in Russia and what policy ideas have they suggested in the past year?
Orthodox priest Fyodor Lukyanov: abortions should require the husband’s consent
In January, Fyodor Lukyanov, the chairman of the Patriarchal Commission on Family Matters, Protection of Motherhood and Childhood, proposed to the State Duma’s Committee on Family, Women and Children that abortions should require the consent of the pregnant woman’s husband.