Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 26 – Russian officials
insist that food prices have gone up in Kaliningrad only 22 percent over the
last year, but a survey of markets and stores found that they have in fact
risen 50 to 60 percent, a development that is forcing Kaliningraders to draw down
their savings and cut back their consumption in serious ways.
These increases are sparking fears
that there will be more in the coming months, that food will become
inaccessible, and that the only way people will be able to have food will be to
grow their own, a fear stoked by a recent statement by the Kaliningrad governor
that he wants to make it easier for people to restart gardening to feed
themselves.
But such developments are also
raising questions about the reliability of official statistics in the current
economic crisis and about the possibility that residents of the Russian enclave
may be among the first regions in the Russian Federation to organize and
demonstrate against what is happening to them.
And should such demonstrations
occur, it is entirely possible that they would lead to and even be led by
people like the Donbas militants who claim to be acting in the name of social
justice and a strong power rather than by those who might be interested in
forming a fourth Baltic republic.
Some in Moscow might view the former
as less threatening than the latter given the Kremlin’s obsession with the
inviolability of current borders, but in fact, the former would be far more
threatening because it would mean that Donbas-type militants would have come
into Russia and would be threatening the existing Russian government.
Those reflections are sparked by a discussion
of the deteriorating situation in Kaliningrad offered by Rosbalt.ru journalist
Yuliya Paramonova, a discussion that is all the more disturbing because many of
the things she points to in that Russian exclave are also true in other parts
of the Russian Federation (rosbalt.ru/kaliningrad/2015/01/23/1360277.html).
Price increases over the last year
are forcing Kaliningraders to cut back on consumption, Paramonova begins. “According
to official statistics, price increases for food over the past year were 22
percent. However, experts offer other statistics,” with some pointing to price
increases of a third over the last six months alone and others still more.
These increases reflect both
sanctions and the embargo and also the collapse of the ruble exchange rate, she
notes. But together they have had a
serious impact on the level of consumption with one food store operator says
that there has been “a sharp decline” in consumption of no less than ten
percent.”
The All-Russian Peoples Front says
that price increases have occurred in all trading places in the oblast, and one
of its leaders Andrey Asmolov says that in January 2015 alone, “prices for food
jumped by a third,” although that is not something that officials are prepared
to acknowledge.
“According to the Kaliningrad
statistics office,”Asmolov says, “prices in the oblast rose 6.2 percent. But we
consider that the bureaucrats of Rosstat and the organs which are called upon
to control the situation are being too clever by half. They are carrying out
their monitoring function without leaving their offices.” If they did their
jobs, they would see prices rose by 30 percent.
Rosstat is not the only government
agency which isn’t telling the truth, he continues. The Federal Anti-Monopoly
Service isn’t either. It earlier advised that there wouldn’t be any significant
increase in prices for food in January, but in fact prices went up and are
continuing to do so, Asmolov says.
Some United Russian politicians like Sverdlovsk’s
Ilya Gaffner can suggest that in the face of rising prices and falling incomes,
Russians should eat less, but, Paramonova says, “Kaliningrad bureaucrats can’t
allow themselves such thoughtlessness [because] Kaliningrad is one of the leaders
among Russian regions as far as prices increases for food are concerned.”
The Kaliningrad government has asked for
Moscow’s help twice but so far without the results it hopes for, including
boosts in supplies of basic food stuffs and price controls. Officials say that
they will continue to ask, but it appears they have ever less confidence that
the central government will or perhaps can do anything.
Clearly fearful of what may
happen in the future, the Kaliningrad governor has directed his subordinates to
make it easier for people to gain access to dacha gardens and thus grow their
own food, something that might help in the longer term but the
announcement of which is anything but
reassuring now.
Just how worried some Kaliningraders
now are is suggested by the comment of one of them to Paramonova. A certain
Vladimir, full name not given, said, “people in complete silence are going
among the shelves of stores and don’t know what they should take lest it be too
expensive. Soon they will visit stores the way they do museums.”
Vladimir’s words, the Rosbalt.ru
journalist says, may be overblown. But she adds, “among consumers are already
circulating various ‘apocalyptic’ rumors, including for example about a significant
increase in the price of bread” already next month.
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