SPATIAL DIFFERENTIATION OF RURAL TERRITORIES IN THE KALININGRAD REGION: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOCIO-ECONOMIC POLICIES

The article analyses the challenges associated with the development of rural areas in the Kaliningrad region. The author analyses trends in the development of agriculture, population dynamics, and settlement patterns, while also exploring their interconnect-edness and external impacts. The research draws upon comparative-geographical, eco-nomic-statistical, and cartographic analyses utilizing official statistical data. The study reveals that since the early 2000s, agricultural production in the Kaliningrad region has been outpacing the national average growth rate. This is primarily attributed to the advancement of larger organisations, while the growth rates of household and small-scale farms remain comparatively low. This development trend is underpinned by a surge in labour productivity accompanied by a substantial reduction in the workforce. Consequently, rural residents are increasingly seeking alternative employment opportunities, either moving to urban areas or engaging in a different type of economic activities. Contrary to the situation in most regions of the Russian Federation, the rural population of the Kaliningrad region is growing. This growth is facilitated by an influx of individuals from other parts of Russia and other countries. Following the polarisation theory, population growth is driven by municipalities in the western part of the oblast, while eastern rural territories are losing population due to both natural decline (common to the oblast as a whole) and migration. Eastern municipalities have the demographic potential to increase the working-age population, while the western part of the oblast does not. The region has been implementing a policy of support for rural territories, especially for the peripheral eastern municipalities. However, there is a need for the policy to be further reinforced, alongside the development of a comprehensive spatial development strategy for the region. The article outlines proposals in this regard.


Introduction
Numerous works published in Russia and internationally have looked at the problems of spatial differentiation, with a special focus on rural peripherisation.This article draws on a range of ideas put forward in those works.
Globally, the development of the rural economy and rural settlement patterns is significantly influenced by core-periphery dynamics and territorial polarisation, a relationship first brought to scholarly attention by François Perroux [26].
The influential concept of polarised biosphere was formulated by the Soviet, and later Russian, geographer Boris Rodoman [29].Met with criticism in the Soviet Union, it is widely used today.The polarisation of the 1970s prompted the emergence of concepts such as the unified settlement system, where the works of Kazys Šešelgis [30] and Boris Khorev [16] had an essential role.It was at this juncture that Georgy Lappo [9] proposed his concept of the support framework for settlement.
A comprehensive approach to rural settlement, considered in conjunction with population replacement and advances in agriculture, first appeared in the works of Sergey Kovalev [7].A multidimensional exploration of rural areas in line with this approach is carried out by Moscow scholars [3; 5; 11; 24; 25, etc.].The core-periphery dynamics in rural areas have been studied extensively by international scholars [19; 21; 22; 27, etc.].
Researchers of rural areas in the Kaliningrad region may find of interest the works of Lithuanian authors [20; 23; 28, etc.].The settlement system in Lithuania bears similarities to that of Kaliningrad, with comparable processes governing the organisation of agricultural production.The influence of the unified settlement system concept is visible in the articles of Lithuanian researchers, particularly in the descriptions of polycentric systems.Polarisation in Lithuania is even more pronounced than in the Russian region in question, with many family-owned farms having gone out of operation [18].Polarisation becomes especially evident when considering changes in settlement patterns.Against the background of a 23 % population decline in the country (and a 25 % in rural areas) between 1990 and 2023, the decrease was particularly sharp in the periphery 1 despite the efforts the authorities made to retain youth in rural areas [31] or improve territorial planning documents [17].
The agri-food complex in the Kaliningrad region is highly dependent on international interactions.Therefore, in the face of the illegitimate sanctions policies, Russian regions meet challenges that are much more radical than those described by Tatyana Nefedova [10].Additional support measures are needed to promote the development of the agricultural sector in the exclave of Kaliningrad.This includes stimulating import substitution, which is vital for achieving food security.It is also essential to take into account not only imports being rendered more difficult but also the need for securing exports of vegetable oils, soybean meal, rapeseed and grain from the region.
The study of the rural areas of the Kaliningrad region has a rich historical background.Economic and demographic rural studies at Kaliningrad State University date back to the 1970s.More comprehensive research has been conducted in the post-Soviet period by scholars from the Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University (IKBFU), other Kaliningrad organisations, as well as experts from Moscow and St. Petersburg.In 2022, a collective monograph by IKBFU researchers titled The Kaliningrad Village in the Early 21 st Century: Production, Settlement Patterns and Social Innovations appeared, which examined rural population, settlement, and the development and placement of agricultural production, considering their interrelations [6].
Studies focusing on the economy, population, and settlement patterns of the Kaliningrad region have demonstrated that its rural areas undergo processes similar to those observed in most other regions of Central Russia.However, the intensity of these processes and some other aspects are region-specific due to the interaction of various factors, including natural, historical, economic, social, demographic, and even (due to the enclave status of the region) foreign policy factors.
This study aims to identify territorial differences in agriculture, settlement patterns, and population in the rural areas of the Kaliningrad region, analyse the mutual effects of these dissimilarities, assess the emerging development challenges and associated disparities, and prepare recommendations for regional and municipal development and spatial organisation strategies.

Methods
Methodologically, this study employs a systemic and comprehensive approach to rural areas, at the core of which is the examination of elements within a system seen as a single whole interconnected by internal relationships.The territorial systems in question include the territorial-industrial system of production, the settlement system and the socio-demographic situation, which was defined by Nikolai Agofonov [2] as the relationships between a region's demographic and other socioeconomic components.This approach is comprehensive in that the elements are examined concerning their mutual connections and interactions with natural, ecological, historical, political, geopolitical, and other factors operating in the territory.
The hypothesis put forward in this study makes use of the confirmed assumptions about the applicability to the study territory of polarisation concepts, which has been revised and adjusted in the works of Aleksandr Kostyaev [8], Tatyana Nefedova, and other scholars [11; 12].This research incorporates methodologies and findings related to the typology of rural territories [4; 13; 14], changes in the occupations of rural inhabitants, the functional categorisation of rural settlements [1] and the evolution of rural-urban partnership [14].Patterns of rural area development in the exclave of Kaliningrad have been identified using the latest statistical data.
Comparative-geographical, graph-analytical, economic-cartographic and economic-statistical methods were utilised in the study, along with the empirical typologisation method.Data derived from sociological studies conducted when investigating social innovations in the region were also taken into account [15].

Rural population change and its territorial features
The Kaliningrad region is one of the few in Russia that witnessed an increase in the rural population, with the growth rate reaching 0.89 % in 2022.This rise is attributed to migrants from other, mostly eastern and northern, regions of the country, as well as from the CIS.
Despite this growth, the number of people employed in agriculture rapidly declined in the region from the mid-2000s to 2020.Only in 2021-2022 did a small increase occur (Fig. 1).Between 1990 and 2022, the region's rural population increased by 49,000 people (26 %), whilst the number of people employed in agriculture, forestry, hunting, fishing and fish farming decreased by 22,100, which amounts to a 50 % reduction.In 2022, there were 22,100 people employed in the industry, accounting for 4.4 % of the employed population.This includes 17,700 people involved in crop and livestock farming, hunting and related services, making up 3.5 % of the employed population and 7.5 % of the total rural population.Additionally, 1,700 were employed in forestry and timber harvesting, and 2,700 worked in fishing and fish farming.The territorial variations in rural population change, observed over a sufficiently long period, align with the concept of polarization.The intra-regional socioeconomic zones identified with its help (the immediate and remote suburban zones of Kaliningrad, the periphery, see Figure 2) differ in terms of the demographic situation.As the change between 2010 and early 2023 figures suggests, despite the overall rural population growth observed across the Kaliningrad region, its eastern and northern municipalities continue to lose population.The most considerable growth was recorded in the municipalities of Kaliningrad's immediate suburban zone (Fig. 3).Comparing the population change in rural and urban areas reveals that the differences between the territories are minimal when it comes to core-periphery relations.In all the peripheral municipalities, both urban and rural populations experienced a decline in population from 2010 to 2023 (except the Gusev district, where the number of residents increased despite the rural population decline).
In the remote suburban zone within each of the three municipalities, changes in the urban and rural population followed a similar pattern: population decreased in the Pravdinsk and Polessk urban districts and grew in the Gvardeysk municipal district.
Different trends developed in the immediate suburban zone.In the Guryevsk, Zelenogradsk and Mamonovo municipalities, urban and rural populations increased, whilst both declined in the Baltiysk urban district.In the Svetly district, the urban population decreased against a growth in the rural population; in the Svetlogorsk and Yantarny districts, the situation was the opposite.
Figure 4 illustrates the role of natural and migratory movements in the overall urban and rural population change at a municipal level from 2010 to 2022.It highlights demographic disparities in the periphery, which witnessed a substantial decline in the overall population.The districts of Gusev and Sovetsk, the latter having no rural population, experienced a less dramatic reduction in the population size.Municipalities in the remote suburban zone showed similar population decrease trends.In contrast, all municipalities in the immediate suburban zone, including Kaliningrad, saw an increase in population.In all the municipalities, except the suburban Guryevsk and Bagrationovsk districts, natural population decline occurred.There was also a migration outflow from all peripheral municipalities except Gusev.However, the net migration rate was notably lower in the district than the natural population decline, contributing to an overall decrease in the region's population.
In 2022, the pandemic and the increasingly challenging international political situation caused the intensity of migration to decrease.Peripheral municipalities, such as Krasnoznamensk and Neman, had a positive net migration rate and a relatively small population decline, whereas overall from 2010 to 2023, both urban and rural populations decreased significantly in these areas (see Fig. 1).In the Ozersk municipality, migration gains exceeded natural population losses, resulting in an increase in the number of residents.However, the situation worsened in the Gusev municipality, which, largely due to the success of the General Satellite technopolis, had shown population growth in the town itself and only a slight decrease in rural areas (Fig. 5).In Kaliningrad's immediate suburban zone, the most considerable contribution to population change is made by the municipalities of Guryevsk, which abuts the regional centre, and Zelenogradsk, situated between Kaliningrad and the coastal area.The difference from the period of 2010-2021 lies in a slight decrease in population in the Bagrationovsk municipality, Svetly, Ladushkin and Mamonovo districts.In the immediate suburban zone, the Polessk municipality, unlike the Gvardeysk and Pravdinsk municipalities, has seen an increase in the number of residents.Overall, the tendency of population concentration within the immediate suburban zone of Kaliningrad remains despite the noted differences in population change in 2023 compared to 2010-2023.
The municipalities have different age and gender structures in terms of both natural and migration movements (Table 1).The disparities observed in the rural areas closely mirror the variations in the characteristics of natural and migratory population movements.There are dissimilarities between districts classified as belonging to the immediate and remote suburban zones and the periphery.Even greater differences exist between municipal and urban districts.The latter often have only a small rural population, which may reside in close proximity to towns.Additionally, childbirths may be registered not at the parents' place of residence but at the municipality's urban centre.This may explain the extremely low proportion of children aged from 0 to 15 years in some urban districts within the immediate suburban zone.The differences between the suburban and peripheral districts can be summarised as follows.The suburban municipalities often have a higher proportion of both working-age men and women and a lower proportion of retirees.
In all the peripheral districts, except for Slavsk, the percentage of males younger than the working age is above the regional average; as for females, this proportion is below the average only in the Gusev urban district.This implies that the next 15 years will see the emergence of positive demographic trends for labour force replacement, with the number of retirees being another significant factor.In the suburban zone, there are limited opportunities for labour force replacement, as only the Bagrationovsk and Mamonovo districts have a population aged 0-15 that exceeds the regional average for both males and females.
Significant deviations from the regional average are influenced by various factors affecting the age structure.Although migration is usually the main factor, birth and age-specific mortality rates also matter.Demographic indicators, in turn, depend on different sets of factors and their quantitative differences in various municipalities.
There are certain differences in the gender structure of the region's rural and urban populations.In rural areas, there is a higher proportion of children (due to a slightly higher birth rate) and a lower proportion of the elderly population.Amongst the working-age population, the proportion of men is nearly identical in both urban and rural areas.However, for women, it is significantly higher in urban areas, which can be attributed to the migration of working-age females to towns.
Indeed, the contribution of men to the total population is considerably higher in rural areas than in urban ones.Therefore, the proportion of men in the overall population is higher in rural areas as well.In the other two aggregated groups, the percentage of men in rural and urban areas is roughly the same (Table 2).The municipalities differ significantly in the gender structure of the rural population.The low proportion of men in the Ladushkin urban district and the high proportion in the Mamonovo urban district are not indicative, as these random deviations from the average can be a result of their small population sizes.The same factor seems to be responsible for the relatively high proportion of elderly men in these municipalities and the Yantarny urban district.In the other municipal districts, the proportion of males fluctuates between 49 and 54 % amongst those below working age, ranging from 28 to 33 % amongst retirees.
The gender structure of rural populations depends crucially on the economic specialisation of their places of residence and the economic situation in the district centres.In the immediate suburban zone, it is also greatly affected by the workforce needs of Kaliningrad.For example, the Baltic urban district has the highest percentage of men (65 %) among working-age individuals because of its coastal location, an economic specialisation of the district centre that relies on male labour and the nearby villages functioning as 'dormitory' areas.
The age-gender structure of municipalities determines the possibilities for intergenerational workforce transition.Workforce transition coefficients are presented in Table 3, indicating the number of individuals entering the working age bracket each year per 1,000 new retirees, with age-specific mortality neglected.The coefficient value is more favourable for the rural area than the urban area: 950 against 850.In eight municipal districts, it significantly exceeds 1,000, ensuring a youthful labour surplus, even when accounting for age-specific mortality.Amongst these are five out of the seven peripheral municipal districts that have rural populations.Consequently, the peripheral municipalities, except Slavsk and Chernyakhovsk, have added potential for out-migration to urban areas or the more challenging creation of jobs in rural areas.Amongst the municipalities with a substantial share of rural population, the Guryevsk urban district, which skirts Kaliningrad, is least likely to reap dividends from intergenerational workforce transition.

Agricultural production dynamics and industry consolidation
A monograph by Gintarė Pociūtė-Sereikienė provides a detailed analysis of the situation in agriculture [28].Below, more recent data are presented comparing the dynamics of agricultural production and population in the Kaliningrad region.
Figure 6 shows that after a fall in the regional agricultural output to 0.46 % of the national total by 2001 (at the time, the region's rural population accounted for 0.55 % of that living across the country), the trend reversed as early as 2002: agricultural production in the region began to grow at a faster rate than the national average.The region's contribution to the total national output was increasing rapidly despite occasional weather-related challenges.In 2005, the region's contribution to national agricultural production (0.55 %) surpassed its proportion of the national rural population (0.54 %), yet it remained lower than its share of the total population (0.66 %).By 2021, this figure had risen to 0.73 %, surpassing the region's share of the rural population (0.62 %, compared to 0.55 % in 2005) and the national total population (0.70 %).
By 2022, grain and livestock production in the Kaliningrad region had increased dramatically compared to 2005.Yet, there was a slight decline in the production of potatoes and vegetables (Table 4).The growth was driven by large organisations entering the agricultural sector, with the production of all types of products listed in Table 4, as well as rapeseed, witnessing a significant increase.The production of all types of products by smallholdings declined with the exception of grain, whose volume was not substantial to begin with.The decrease in the production of potatoes and vegetables by smallholdings was not compensated for by other types of producers.
The contribution of farms to the production of all almost types of produce grew, except for the plummeting egg production.Yet, it increased at a slower rate than that of organisations, with the notable exception of vegetables.
The degree of industry consolidation in the Kaliningrad region is above the national average, with organisations taking centre stage.In 2000-2021, concentration was growing in the region, as is evident from Table 5 showing the growing contribution of organisations to the total output of grain, potatoes, vegetables, meat, milk and eggs.In this respect, the Kaliningrad region far outstripped the national average.As the table suggests, organisations take the lead in the production of all products considered except for potatoes and vegetables, where their contribution increased nevertheless between 2000 and 2021.Smallholdings make the most substantial contribution to the production of potatoes, vegetables and milk.In 2022, they accounted for 19.4 % of the total agricultural output, outperforming farms and individual entrepreneurs (8.4 %).The latter developed at a slower rate in the Kaliningrad region than across the country.They are most visible in the production of labour-intensive crop produce: vegetables and potatoes, accounting for 42 % and 25 % of regional total output respectively.Farms and individual entrepreneurs produce 13 % of the grain in the region.1

Territory-specific features of rural settlement
On 1 January 2022, there were 1,075 villages in the Kaliningrad region: 20 of them were unpopulated, 1 and four were former urban-type settlements.There were 23 urban locations, including 22 towns (21 of which were centres of eight urban districts and twelve municipal districts) and one urban-type settlement, a centre of an urban district.Six out of nine urban districts had a rural population.
The immediate suburban zone has highly populated rural settlements (Fig. 7).In most of the municipalities, the number of residents per village is above the national average, with the exception of the Ladushkin, Mamonovo and Baltiysk urban districts with small rural populations.Thirty villages have a population of over 1,000 people; two, about 5,000-6,000; nine, about 2,000-4,000.The immediate suburban zone and the periphery have a smaller number of residents per village.In three municipal districts of the immediate suburban zone, there are five villages with a population of over 1,000 people (three of them have more than 2,000 residents, including two former urban-type settlements which have lost their status after the closure of the dominant enterprise. 1 Population of urban and rural settlements in the Kaliningrad region, 2022, Kaliningrad : Kaliningradstat.In the peripheral municipalities, six villages have a population of over 1,000 people; one over 2,000.The most densely populated peripheral district is Slavsk, located on polder lands drained by canals, with dam-bound settlements along the canal banks.The least densely populated is the Ozersk urban district in the southern part of the region.It is situated in a hilly terrain with irregular-shaped land parcels and small settlements. In addition to a larger number of residents per settlement, villages in the immediate suburban zone have a higher density of rural population and usually shorter average distances between neighbouring locations, i. e., a smaller area per settlement (Fig. 8).The Ladushkin and Mamonovo urban districts are once again exceptions.The peripheral districts have lower population density and typically a larger area per settlement.The remote suburban zone falls within the middle range in terms of these measures.

Conclusion
The following conclusions can be drawn from the present study.1.The Kaliningrad region has not been immune to the characteristic trend of current global development: its economy and settlement system are polarising, with the population concentrating in agglomerations and the periphery experiencing economic decline.
2. At the national level, polarisation is a result of large holding companies accounting for an increasing proportion of agricultural production, declining employment in the industry in the periphery, population outflow from peripheral municipalities and economic diversification in the rural areas.
3. In the case of Kaliningrad, the factors at play are as follows: -the growing rural population of the urbanised western part of the region, attributed to a positive net migration rate and the rural population decline in the eastern periphery, which is occurring against the background of declining employment in agriculture; -intensive rural-urban labour exchange, particularly in Kaliningrad's immediate suburban zone; -the age-gender structure of the population in the periphery ensuring an intergenerational workforce transition without losses or even a youthful labour surplus, which is not the case in most municipalities of the suburban zone; -the periphery underperforming the suburban zone in terms of social infrastructure development and eastern peripheral municipalities having, as a rule, more modest opportunities than western suburban districts for forging rural-urban ties and villages benefiting from the urban infrastructure; -the absence of mutual horizontal ties between economic entities.At the municipal level, the districts exhibit profound socioeconomic differences, partly accounted for by their geographical position.A beneficial factor is that each municipality has at its core a town that provides services, albeit not always in sufficient amounts, to surrounding villages.Here, it is advisable not to limit oneself to conventional socioeconomic regulation but to embrace social innovations, which cannot be introduced by villages alone (it is worth noting that opinion polls show that rural presidents appreciate such innovations).In some areas, social innovations have already gained currency.These are household-driven rural tourism, production of new crops (asparagus, bog bilberry, mushrooms, etc.), breeding of new animals (quails, ostriches, rabbits, etc.), cow and goat cheese manufacturing, etc.Moreover, rural schools and libraries have recently become visible cultural actors.
The Kaliningrad region has been paying particular attention to the economic and social development of rural areas, particularly in the eastern municipalities.Villages have received both federal and regional financial aid. 1he Kaliningrad region is running 22 governmental programmes, two of them focusing on rural development: Development of Agriculture and Comprehensive Development of Rural Areas. 1 A branch of the Moy Biznes entrepreneur support centre operates in the region, overseeing amongst other things the Kaliningrad Regional Microfinance Fund. 2  Eastern municipalities receive special treatment: within the Vostok programme seeking to attract investment and create jobs in the area long-term (up to 10 years) loans ranging from 2 to 50 million roubles are provided on a competitive basis with a preferential interest rate of 1 %. 3  There is a need for a regional spatial development strategy aligned with a new socio-economic development strategy, which is also yet to be developed.The documents should include the recommendations outlined in this article concerning the development of the region's rural areas, considering their territorial distinctions.When devising the strategies, it is advisable to cover both the conventional strategic objectives of regional development and relevant research findings.Appendix 1 lists measures pertaining to the rural areas of the region as a whole, whilst Appendix 2 outlines proposals for the immediate suburban zone and the periphery.Creating remote employment opportunities for residents in peripheral areas and providing training to rural residents and entrepreneurs in remote work methods.Relocating part of production facilities from Kaliningrad to the surrounding rural areas Diversification of the economic structure: stimulating non-agricultural activities and the manufacturing of new types of products Support for agri-food clusters and value-added chains in the agro-industrial complex Support for production cooperatives engaged in equipment maintenance and repairs, fertilizer supply, and plant protection product manufacturing Import substitution: creating facilities for equipment maintenance facilities, seed production and animal breeding; creation of a breeding and genetic centre for poultry breeding Additional funding for programmes supporting small-scale farming in rural areas.Expansion of the 'East' programme to create jobs in the periphery, including the utilisation of social innovations Merit-based beneficial loans for small production companies may be supplemented with allocating land plots

Fig. 1 .
Fig. 1.Rural population change and the number of people employed in agriculture, 1,000 people, 1990-2022

Fig. 3 .
Fig. 3. Urban and rural population change, 2023 on 2010, % (as at the beginning of the year) Compiled based on data: Key indicators of economic and social development of cities and districts of the Kaliningrad region.Kaliningrad: Kaliningradstat, 2011 ; Estimated population of the Kaliningrad region as of 1 January 2023, based on the recalculation of the 2020 All-Russian Population Census results, 2023, Kaliningradstat, URL: https://39.rosstat.gov.ru/statistical_news/document/203423(accessed 09.06.2023).

Fig. 7 .
Fig. 7. Average number of residents per village in Kaliningrad municipalities on 1 January 2022, people Source: Population of urban and rural settlements in the Kaliningrad region.2022, Kaliningrad : Kaliningradstat.

Fig. 8 .
Fig. 8. Density of rural settlements Legend: the districts of the immediate suburban zone are highlighted in bold, those of the remote suburban zone are in italics, and the peripheral districts are in regular font.Comment: the area of the Zelenogradsk urban district used in the calculation does not include the area of the lagoons.Compiled based on: Official statistics, 2023, Kaliningradstat, URL: https://kaliningrad.gks.ru/ofstatistics(accessed 01.05.2023).

Table 1 Distribution of men and women in the rural areas of the Kaliningrad region by aggregated age groups, % of the total, as of 1 January 2022
Legend: C stands for the population younger than the working age; W, for the working age population; R, for retired population.* There is no rural population in the Sovetsk and Pionersk urban districts.Compiled based on: Population size by gender and age in the municipalities of the Kaliningrad region as of 1 January 2022, 2023, Kaliningradstat, URL: https://39.rosstat.gov.ru/population (accessed 09.06.2023) ; Population of the Kaliningrad region by gender and age as of 1 January 2015 -1 January 2022, 2023, Kaliningradstat, URL: https://39.rosstat.gov.ru/(accessed 09.06.23).

Table 2 The percentage of men in the aggregated age group in the rural areas of municipalities as of January 1, 2022
Legend: T stands for total; C, for the population younger than the working age; W, for the working age population; R, for retired population.Compiled based on: Population size by gender and age in the municipalities of the Kaliningrad region as of 1 January 2022, 2023, Kaliningradstat, URL: https://39.rosstat.gov.ru/population (accessed 09.06.2023) ; Population of the Kaliningrad region by gender and age as of 1 January 2015-1 January 2022, 2023, Kaliningradstat, URL: https://39.rosstat.gov.ru/ (accessed 09.06.2023).

Rural development support measures to be included in the Kaliningrad region's strategic and spatial planning documents, based on the findings of the study
This study was supported within the programme ERA.Net RUS plus and by the Rus-Consolidated annual report on the progress and effectiveness assessment of state programmes in the Kaliningrad region for the year 2021, Government of the Kaliningrad region.URL: https://gov39.ru/upload/iblock/d48/cfebeejuostc4bw3n7xstrkzzan4jc3s/Svodnyy-godovoy-doklad-za-2021-god.pdf(accessed15.06.2023).2MoyBiznescentrefor entrepreneurship support in the Kaliningrad region, URL: https:// mbkaliningrad.ru/(accessed15.06.2023).3TheVostok programme, Moy Biznes, URL: https://mbkaliningrad.ru/vostok/(accessed 15.06.2023).Full gasification of rural areas; wider coverage with centralised water supply Online preparation of rural youth for enrolment to universities and vocational schools Hands-on training and education in school to meet the needs of the labour market Economics Providing incentives for agricultural consumer cooperatives engaged in crop production and livestock breeding, as well as cooperative centres for machinery repair and maintenance Assistance to the development of rural tourism; tourism courses for rural residents Putting idle land to economic use by allocating land plots to farms and individual entrepreneurs