Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 11 – Even before
he was chosen to lead the CPSU and hence the USSR, Mikhail Gorbachev in
December 1984 said he opposed the kind of megaprojects Soviet leaders had used
up to then and favored instead more balanced development, a shift in attitude
that informed his subsequent decision to block Siberian river diversion.
His decision had other consequences
as well: it eliminated one of the means Soviet leaders had used to promote
patriotic feelings, and it reduced one of the main channels of the
inter-regional transfer of resources. But it gave rise to the hope that Moscow
would not sacrifice services for the Soviet population on the altar of such leadership
projects.
Both Gorbachev and his first Russian
successor Boris Yeltsin followed that approach, the first out of conviction and
the second because of the absence of resources or agreement on what might be
done. But now as the Sochi Olympiad shows, Yeltsin’s successor, Vladimir Putin,
clearly wants to return to the megaproject approach.
That shift – and Sochi is only the
largest and most prominent of the projects of this kind the Russian president
has pushed --raises at least three questions: First, why has Putin made this
shift? Second, what will this change mean for the Russian Federation if it
extends, as seems likely, beyond Sochi? And third, can his government carry it
out?
The reasons Putin has made this
shift to megaprojects are clear. On this as on other issues, his thinking
reflects his belief that Russia made a mistake in turning away from many Soviet
ideas and should at least selectively draw on what worked in Soviet times as it
moves toward the future.
But he clearly is driven by two
other ideas as well. Megaprojects of the
Soviet kind for all the waste they involved and all the distortion in the flow
of resources they led to were inspirational, and Putin certainly believes that
such projects not only can promote patriotic feelings among Russians but
impress outsiders with Russia’s power.
And he also sees, and this is not so
much something new as a vast expansion of what was true of some Soviet
megaprojects, especially in Brezhnev’s time, that such efforts are an effective
means of winning support among elites by giving the Kremlin the opportunity to
divert resources into the hands of officials and business leaders and thus keep
or win their loyalty.
If Putin views the Sochi megaproject
as a model, what might that mean for the Russian Federation as a whole?
Gorbachev’s critique of that approach provides a useful place to start. The last Soviet leader saw megaprojects as
problematic for at least three reasons. First, such projects often failed to do
more than win short-term propaganda points.
Second, they took money away from
the basic social needs of the population and thus fed anger and even resistance
on the part of many. And third, they represented an often unacknowledged transfer of resources from one
part of the country to another without any consideration of the impact of such
shifts on the people and leaders of the donor region.
Returning to such an approach now
almost certainly will exacerbate all these problems not only because the center
has much less power than it did in Soviet times but also because the losers will
be increasingly likely to complain and exploit the new media to generate support
for their views, at the very least triggering the intensification of center-periphery
struggles.
But the largest question is this:
can Putin pull this shift off and make megaprojects work for him and his
country? Gorbachev dispensed with them
largely because Soviet leaders had not been able to do so. Instead, while they
clearly won short-term propaganda victories with them, projects like the Virgin
Lands or BAM were not nearly as effective as they were presented.
In the latest issue of “Ekspert,”
Aleksey Shchukin argues that Sochi shows that Russia has again “learned how to
carry out megaprojects.” He says that the country “completely succeeded in preparing
all sites for the Sochi Olympiad” and thus can launch other such projects in the
future (expert.ru/expert/2014/07/nauchilis-delat-megaproektyi/).
Other observers, Russian and
international alike, are less certain. They point not only to problems in that
construction effort, including its inefficiencies, waste and corruption, but
also to the likelihood that the Sochi effort, like those of other Soviet-era or
Soviet-style megaprojects, will fall far short of the promises Putin and his
regime have made for it.
No comments:
Post a Comment