Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 20 – “Import
substitution” may be the most important new term to enter Russian discourse
over the last year, but it isn’t going to happen in the next year, experts say,
and the reasons for that are to be found in the actions and inactions of the
central Russian government in Moscow.
Dmitry Yepov of the Siberian news agency, Globalsib.com,
having surveyed expert opinion and members of the business community, concludes
that Russia will be unable to achieve the import substitution that the Kremlin
has called for to counter sanctions anytime soon and that Moscow’s own approach
is to blame for that situation (globalsib.com/20994/).
Given Russia’s reliance over the last
two decades or more on many kinds of foreign products, the country simply cannot
turn on a dime and create substitutes, the experts say. In many cases it takes
ten years or more from a decision to produce machine tools or components and
the first output.
Moreover, they say, it is expensive and
requires subsidies. But instead of helping, Moscow is getting in the way. On the one hand, it has raised interest rates
to the point that businesses can’t afford to borrow the money they need to
change. And on the other, the central government is not subsidizing firms that
produce for export as China does but restricting them, thus limiting the potential
of such firms to engage in import substitution.
This has led to “a
paradoxical situation” in which Moscow is calling for import substitution and simultaneously
making it impossible for firms to engage in it. And all this has been made
worse, Yepov says, because Russia has suffered earlier economic crises and as a
result, “from the production system which existed in the USSR not a stone
remains on a stone.”
Even the one
bright spot casts a dark shadow, the Siberian journalist says. Military
factories are producing more, but that is because for them, price is no object
or limiting factor. Thus, they suck up money which might otherwise be devoted
to the economy as a whole and promote import substitution as the government
says it wants.
The Russian
government “must change its policy toward business” if it wants import
substitution to happen. But few businessmen believe that it will anytime soon
As a result, they expect in 2015 “an intensification of crisis phenomena,” little
progress toward import substitution, and significant price increases.
Given all that,
the businessmen with whom Yepov spoke say, their main focus in the coming year
will not be about achieving any strategic shifts but rather simply to survive
and hope for changes in the future.
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