Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 22 – The budgets of
regional governments are still in trouble, but their situation is actually
somewhat better now than it was a year ago not only because of Moscow’s
decision to provide more help but because of a quirk in the way in which their
budgets are financed, according to social geographer Natalya Zubarevich.
Zubarevich, who three years ago
attracted widespread attention for her ideas about the existence of “four
Russias” each of which was moving in a different direction and at a different
speed now says that as a result of the crisis, the four are moving together,
although for how long it is impossible to say (novayagazeta.ru/politics/66622.html).
Part of the reason for that, she
says, is that the Russian finance ministry has changed its approach to the
regions and has slowed its efforts to cut back transfer payments to them while
helping the regions to obtain financing from banks in the center. As a result, the situation during the first
eight months of this year looks somewhat better than a year earlier.
But a more important reason is this,
she says. “More than half of the federal budget comes from the sale of oil and
gas. This income is in dollars. According to various estimates, each dollar decline
in the price of a barrel of oil leads to losses in the federal budget of 90 to
100 billion rubles.”
At the same time, however, “for each
decline of the ruble to the dollar,” the Russian government “receives an
additional 180 to 200 billion rubles.” And since the budget it is based on
rubles not dollars, it is likely to end this year with a surplus rather than a
deficit, and the regions will thus not suffer in the ways many are predicting,
at least not from this source.
Although Zubarevich does not say so,
this combination of factors may be the one that explains Vladimir Putin’s
strange and otherwise inexplicable comment last week that the decline in the
ruble-dollar exchange rate will give Moscow more rubles to handle its expenses.
No one should think that this is
either a good or sustainable situation for Russia as a whole or for the
regions. Both will have to spend far more on imported goods when they can get
them, both will face inflationary pressures in many areas, and both will find
demands on their budgets outpacing such income.
The main problem of the current
crisis, Zubarevich says, is the collapse in investment across the country.
Second in importance is the end in the growth of real incomes of the
population, and their decline in 40 percent of the regions. But she says she does not expect unemployment
to go up as much as some are predicting.
She gives three reasons for this:
first, Russia’s demographic decline means that the number of people available
to work is falling. Second, the low level of unemployment now is very low and
would rise some but not a lot in any case.
And third, there is likely to be a shift from the official economy to the
shadow economy.
That will hurt government revenues
in the longer term, and it will make corruption even more difficult to root
out. But Russians who want to work will mostly have jobs, the social geographer
says, and that means the prospects for mass protest are significantly less than
many assume.
She says that in her opinion “the situation
will remain under control if the crisis doesn’t go on too long.” At the same
time, however, the attention the authorities are paying to industrial cities is
entirely “understandable. There the potential for protest in the event of mass
dismissals is higher.” In short, city residents will seek jobs in the shadow
sector, and rural residents will as usual turn to the land.
At present, she concludes, four
subjects of the Russian Federation supply 60 percent of the income for the
federal budget, the result of raw material rents and “the rent of the capital
status.” This is how Russians now live,
but in the longer term, it is unsustainable, the social geographer says.
“We need decentralization, but
efforts at tax decentralization will lead to a situation in which the richest
regions will become richer, and the rest will be left behind.” That is a dead
end. A new redistribution of rents is needed but finding such a solution is
extraordinarily difficult, and it will remain all the more difficult under the
current economic conditions.
No comments:
Post a Comment