Federal districts of Russia

additional non-constitutional grouping of regions; it's not subdivision of Russia; created by Vladimir Putin's decree for presidential convenience

The federal districts (Russian: федера́льные округа́, federalnyye okruga) are groupings of the federal subjects of Russia. Federal districts are not mentioned in the nation's constitution. They exist only to monitor the government's control over the region and to compare the federal and regional bodies of law.

List of federal districts

Federal district[1][2]Date

established

Area[3]

(km2)

2010 censusHDI (2019)[2]Gross regional product (2020)[4]FederalsubjectsAdministrativecentreMap of Federal District
Populationper km2GRPGRP per capita
Central18 May 2000650,20038,438,60059.10.847₽33.637 trillion

(Template:To EURB)

854,978 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

18Moscow
Northwestern18 May 20001,687,00013,583,8008.10.835₽10.644 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

762,357 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

11Saint Petersburg
Southern[a][5]18 May 2000427,80016,141,100[b]37.70.801₽6.710 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

407,280 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

8Rostov-on-Don
North Caucasian19 January 2010170,4009,496,80055.70.795₽2.404 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

241,662 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

7Pyatigorsk
Volga18 May 20001,037,00029,900,40028.80.806₽13.669 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

468,462 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

14Nizhny Novgorod
Ural18 May 20001,818,50012,082,7006.60.842₽11.675 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

945,711 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

6Yekaterinburg
Siberian18 May 20004,361,80017,178,2983.90.796₽9.027 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

529,091 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

10Novosibirsk
Far Eastern18 May 20006,952,6008,371,2571.20.810₽6.044 trillion

(€Template:To EURB)

741,938 ₽

(€Template:To EUR)

11Vladivostok

Source:[7]

History

The federal districts of Russia were established by President Vladimir Putin in 2000 to help with the federal government's task of controlling the then 89 federal subjects across the country.[8]

On 19 January 2010, the new North Caucasian Federal District split from the Southern Federal District.[9]

Crimea

In March 2014, after the annexation of Crimea, the Crimean Federal District was created.[10] However, most countries say that this annexation was illegal.[11] On 28 July 2016 the Crimean Federal District was removed and put into the Southern Federal District to improve the governing of the region.[12]

Far East

In November 2018, Buryatia and Zabaykalsky Krai were removed from the Siberian Federal District and added to the Far Eastern Federal District.[13] The administrative centre of the Far Eastern Federal District was moved from Khabarovsk to Vladivostok in December 2018.[14]

References

Other websites