Can State Language Policies Distort Students’ Demand for Education?
By Alexander Muravyev
(IZA and St. Petersburg University GSOM) and Oleksandr
Talavera (University of Sheffield)
With territory larger than Metropolitan
France, and population over 45 million people, Ukraine is characterized by
considerable ethnic diversity. Ukrainians are by far the largest ethnic group constituting
77.8% of the population. Russians are the second largest ethnic group amounting
to 17.3% of the population. The other large minorities include Belarusians,
Moldovans, Crimean Tatars, Bulgarians, Hungarians, Romanians, Poles, and Jews.
An interesting feature of the country is a disproportional use of Russian by
ethnic Ukrainians and other ethnic minorities, a heritage of the explicit and
implicit Russification which occurred over most of the 19th and 20th
centuries. In particular, numerous
surveys in Ukraine in the early 2000s revealed that only half of ethnic
Ukrainians chose Ukrainian as language of interview, 17.9% were indifferent
between Ukrainian and Russian and 32.0% preferred Russian. Strong preference
for Russian is also documented among other ethnic groups.