Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 25 – It has
become axiomatic among analysts that Russia’s economic and political fate
depends upon and tracks with the price of oil and gas, but a Moscow analyst
suggests that because of “systematic mistakes” by the Russian leadership, even
the current rise in oil prices may not be enough to keep Russia from falling
into a recession.
In an article on the “Osobaya
bukhva” portal, Vladislav Polyansky argues that the relationship between
international oil prices and social well-being in the Russian Federation on
which President Vladimir Putin has long counted is changing, with all the
economic, social and political consequences likely to ensue (specletter.com/ekonomika/2013-02-22/neftjanye-reki-ne-garantirujut-kiselnye-berega.html).
When
Putin ran for election to the presidency last time, he said that Russia’s
earnings from the export of oil and gas would be sufficient to increase incomes
and improve the standard of living for all Russians, Polyansky says, but
corruption and other policy mistakes have called those promises into question.
Last
week, he notes, “Kommersant” reported that there had been a slight decline in
consumer spending in January, something other commentators blamed on inflation,
but because Putin couldn’t counter it by raising pay, one may reasonably
conclude that such a small thing may lead to “great perturbations,” according
to the “Osobaya bukha” writer.
Experts
had correctly predicted that 2012 would be a hard time for Russia, but now the question
is what will developments be like in 2013? What will happen with inflation and
consumption if things continue as they are?
The answers so far, Polyansky says, are anything but encouraging despite
the recent increase in oil prices.
Last
week, Igor Nikolayev, the director of the strategic analysis department of RBK,
wrote in Gazeta.ru that not only had consumption fallen but so too had
industrial production. It is “symptomatic,” he said, “that on one and the same
day, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev … again spoke about the necessity and
reality of five percent growth and Rosstat reported about [an 11.8 percent]
fall in industrial production.”
RBK’s
Nikolayev pointed to a number of factors which are having a negative impact on
the Russian economy, including increased social security payments, badly
allocated budgetary expenditures, unrealistic social-economic programs “and
much else,” in Polyansky’s report of the analyst’s comments.
Among
that “much else,” Polyansky said, Nikolayev sharply criticized “expensive and
senseless ‘megaprojects’ which feed the egotism of the Russian leadership but
do not bring in a profit capable of covering expenses” such as the Pacific
summit in Vladivostok, the 2018 football championship, and “the winter Olympiad
in subtropical Sochi.”
Nikolayev
also pointed the fact that the United States will soon sell more oil than it
buys, something that will certainly drive down the prices on which Russia has
relied, and consequently, Polyansky says, he “recommends ‘not to be too
optimistic in one’s assessment of the prospects of the economic development of
Russia in the coming years.”
Polyansky
says that “certainly there is no reason to run to the stores and buy packages
of rice and salt, toilet paper and matches.
But it is long past time for the leadership of the country to introduce
some definition corrections in its macro-economic strategy,” eliminating
expensive “megaprojects” and really combatting corruption.
Other
analysts have an even bleaker view about the future than does Nikolayev,
Polyansky continues. Dmitry Potapenko of the Management Development Group even
says that Nikolayev’s assessments are “too soft.” He said the Kremlin knows how bad things are
for the population but isn’t doing anything but these problems don’t affect it
directly.
Members
of that elite may ultimately discover, however, that such economic problems,
including the possibility of a new recession even with high oil prices, will
ultimately affect them, perhaps precisely in ways that they can’t imagine
because they assume they have insured themselves against any unpleasantness.
No comments:
Post a Comment