Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 20 – Many Russians
assume that they will ride out the current crisis just as they did the crises
of 1998 and 2008, but that assumption is wrong, Leonid Storch argues, because
the former crises were economic and the current one is political. And thus for
this crisis, there is no quick or easy fix as there were in the two earlier
cases.
In a commentary on Kasparov.ru
today, Storch, a Russian who has taught in the US and now lives in Thailand,
says that the two earlier crises were very different from the current one and
that recovery from them was relatively easy in comparison with what will be
required now (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5495206047CE0).
The first two crises, as “even Putin
understands,” had “exclusively economic causes” while the current one “has a
political nature.” Moreover, the first
two were international – 1998 affected the entire post-Soviet space, and 2008
the world economy as a whole – while this one afflicts Russia alone or almost
so.
Russia was able to climb out of the crises
of 1998 and 2008 “quite quickly” and relatively easily because the West
generally retained its trust in the Russian government, and “the strategic
profit from investments in the Russian market exceeded the political and legal
risks connected with these investments.”
Capital from abroad continued to flow
into Russia, Storch notes, and Western banks continued to refinance Russian
companies. But “today the situation is different in a cardinal way.” The
Russian leadership has “lost the credit of trust” it had had earlier and thus
cannot count on the same kind of assistance.
Many in the West were prepared to
overlook Moscow’s war against Georgia and its playing with Iran. “But when the
threat of military actions arose in Europe,” when Moscow began to issue nuclear
threats, and “when the use of gas as a weapon of intimidation passed the limits
of the permissible, the West turned away from Russia.”
“This means,” Storch says, “that Russia
can’t expect any credits,” a situation that means it must rely on its reserves
which may not be as large as many assume. (He cites the conclusions of economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2014/12/russias-foreign-exchange-reserves.)
And it can’t expect oil prices to go back to where they were: the US and OPEC
are ready to live with oil at 60 US dollars a barrel.
And that in turn means, he
continues, that there are quick fixes or easy answers and there aren’t likely
to be any. According to the Russian
commentator, Putin understands that as well and that is why he talked about two
years of difficult times. Telling oneself that things are otherwise may be a
good defense strategy for Russians, but it isn’t a solution.
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