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Far Eastern Federal District (Russian Far East), population ca. 7.02 million Sakha (Yakutia) Republic, capital — Yakutsk, population 949,280 (2002) — the only Far Eastern region that is sometimes counted as part of Siberia. Excluding territories of north-central Kazakhstan, Siberia has
The East Siberian economic region accounted for 4 per cent of the national GRP in 2008. This sparsely populated region between Europe and Asia has high wage levels and also a relatively large portion of employees in the new private sector.
According to the Russian Census of 2010, the Siberian and Far Eastern Federal Districts, located entirely east of the Ural Mountains, together have a population of about 25.6 million. Tyumen and Kurgan Oblasts, which are geographically in Siberia but administratively part of the Urals Federal District , together have a population of about 4.3 ...
Overall similar living conditions of the population. No federal subject can belong to more than one economic region. Economic regions are also grouped into economic zones (also called "macrozones"). An economic region or its parts can belong to more than one economic zone.
This is the list of countries and other inhabited territories of the world by total population, based on estimates published by the United Nations in the 2024 revision of World Population Prospects. It presents population estimates from 1950 to the present.
Siberian, North Asian: Countries ... glaciation to be found on the east Siberian ... they make up only an estimated 10% of the region's population, ...
The Russian government divides the region into three federal districts (groupings of Russian federal subjects), of which only the central one is officially referred to as "Siberian"; the other two are the Ural and Far Eastern federal districts, named for the Ural and Russian Far East regions that correspond respectively to the western and ...
On August 11, 1930, the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee decreed: “To include in the East Siberian Territory the entire territory of the Krasnoyarsk Okrug with the city of Krasnoyarsk”. [2] In 1931 the East Siberian region consisted of 95 districts, 1,890 village councils, 18 cities and 15 workers' settlements. [3]