Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 28 – Former Russian
finance minister Aleksey Kudrin has said and official Russian news agencies
have reported that that Russia’s annexation of Crimea is going to have
extremely deleterious effects on the Russian economy, including massive capital
flight and any hope of real economic growth this year.
Kudrin said yesterday that Russia
will pay for its “independent foreign policy” in Crimea with 150 to 160 billion
US dollars in pure capital flight this year and that the country’s economy
which had been emerging from a serious recession will stagnate or even decline
slightly (interfax.ru/russia/367828).
According to the former finance
minister, this is a price that “society for the time being is prepared to pay”
as the cost of having “an independent foreign policy.” He added that in his view, “this price is not
critical,” although it is much higher than he and other Russian experts had
suggested only a few weeks ago.
We are talking about “hundreds of
billions of dollars,” Kudrin says, although he argues that decisions about
Crimea and Ukraine “cannot be evaluated only in economic terms.” At the same time, these are real costs and
need to be recognized, even if within “the framework of a soft sanctions
scenario,” Russians are prepared to bear.
Kudrin’s judgment is likely correct at least in the
short term. But three caveats suggest
themselves. First, many Russians, although few close to the Kremlin, are
already suffering. They complained about Putin’s spending on the Sochi Olympiad
because it took money away from programs intended to help them, and they are
likely to do the same in this case.
Second, as Kudrin himself says, the
massive economic price of Crimea and Ukraine could go up in a serious way if
the sanctions regime is extended and toughened.
What Russians or anyone else is prepared to accept now, they would be
less prepared to do so if the price went up exponentially.
And third –and this may be the most
important of all—when people begin talking about the costs of a policy instead
of its goals, that in and of itself is corrosive of support for the goals. Again and again and in country after country,
many who may begin by supporting the goals that national elites have announced
turn away from these goals and elites when they learn the costs.
That may now be happening because
although Kudrin is not the first to point to the enormous costs that Vladimir
Putin has inflicted on his own country by his policies, he is one of the most
prominent former officials to do so – and his words, unlike those of some
others, are being disseminated not on websites or papers read only by a few but
by the national media.
Consequently, it is likely that the
current outburst of enthusiasm for Putin’s aggressive policies may wane,
especially if ever more Russians understand just how much these policies are
taking out of their pockets and if the sanctions regime imposed by the West is
both continued and made tougher.
That
this is already happening is suggested by two
reports today, one specifying that Russian pensioners are paying for the Crimean
adventure and another suggesting that Moscow is putting money into Crimea rather
than into Russian medical care (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=53340984A1D45
and
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