Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 13 – The idea that “Moscow
is not Russia” has long been a commonplace among both residents of the capital
and residents of the portions of Russia beyond the ring road, but the two are
increasingly dissimilar, raising the possibility that a conflict between the
capital and the rest of the country could emerge.
In an essay on the “Svobodnaya
pressa” portal, commentator Andrey Ivanov says that “the two Russias” have
never been as different from one another as they are today and interviews two
experts about the meaning of this growing divide and the possibility that it
will lead to conflict (svpressa.ru/society/article/67844/).
Those
questions are prompted by Russian history, Ivanov suggests, because at the end
of the Imperial period there were also two Russias. “One spoke French, read
books and discussed novels. The other was illiterate and deep in poverty. This
ended in 1917 when one Russia simply destroyed the other.”
Mikhail
Remizov, the director of the Moscow Institute of National Strategy, says that
the current differences between the two Russias is “a very important indicator
of social inequality in the country” and that it could be overcome only with
significant investments in infrastructure outside the capital, a change in the
tax system to give the regions more funds, and a redistribution of workplaces to
reduce unemployment there, especially in Central Russia.
While
the gap between Moscow and the regions continues to grow and tensions mount, Remizov
continues, the conflict between the two Russias still has “an inert character,”
one that means the resistance of the regions is likely to take the form of “dying
off” and “emptying out” rather than resistance, a pattern that he suggests is
in many ways “much worse.”
Dmitry
Zhuravlyev, the director of the Moscow Institute of Regional Problems, agreed
that the idea that Moscow and the rest of Russia were “two different countries”
had existed for a long time. “Moscow is not Russia,” he says, largely because “we
have a feudal type of state” in which “the source of capital is the state”
rather than the marketplace.
Because of
rising transportation costs, ever fewer people in the regions have even been to
the capital and so make comparisons between it and themselves on the basis of
the media. For “hatred to Muscovites” to become a political force, he says, people
in the regions would have to feel that the state could not punish them and that
they are united. Neither of which is true today.
He argues that the way to overcome
this divide is to change the tax system so that more money will be available to
the regions and municipalities who can then meet their responsibilities and
ensure that there is more social mobility. But at present, he implies, there
seems little chance of that.
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