Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 24 – The Russian
government cannot afford to maintain its current levels of military spending
for long because its shift of resources to the military sector is threatening
the rest of the Russian economy and because its reserve fund will be
insufficient to pay for this spending for more than another year or two,
according to Sergey Guriyev.
Guriyev, currently an economics
professor at the Sciences Po in Paris and earlier the rector of the Russian
School of Economics in Moscow, says that experts have known this for some time
but that the Kremlin has gone ahead anyway, something that opens the way for radical
shocks ahead (nv.ua/opinion/guriev/kogda-voyna-istoshchit-kreml-49959.html).
The Russian government’s original
budget for 2015 was based on the assumption that oil would be 100 US dollars a
barrel, that Russia’s GDP would grow two percent, and that inflation would not
exceed five percent, he notes. None of those things has proven to be the case;
and the government has cut overall spending by approximately eight percent.
“Nevertheless,” he continues, that has not prevented the government
deficit from ballooning from 0.5 percent of GDP to 3.7 percent, “a serious
problem” even though Russia’s sovereign debt forms “only 13 percent of GDP”
because the Ukrainian war has increased spending and Western sanctions have
made it harder to borrow.
As
a result, Moscow has been forced to dip into its reserve fund. That fund
currently amounts to six percent of GDP. Consequently, if the deficit continues
at 3.7 percent, the Russian government will run out of money in about two
years, forcing it either to withdraw from Ukraine in order to end the sanctions
regime or change its budgets in fundamental ways.
Both
steps would entail “major political risks for Putin,” Guriyev says.
But
in fact, the economist continues, that kind of train wreck may happen far
sooner. During the first three months of this year, he point out, Russia’s
military spending exceeded nine percent of GDP – or “twice more than planned.”
If that level of spending continues, Russia’s reserve fund will be “exhausted
before the end of the year.”
That
military spending is eating up the reserve fund is the result of Russian
decisions made four years ago, Guriyev says. At that time, the government
proposed increasing defense spending from three to more than four percent of
GDP, something Finance Minister Aleksey Kudrin suggested was impossible. He was
summarily fired and that is what the Kremlin seeks.
According
to Guriyev, “the goal of the Kremlin turned out to be unbelievably ambitious
both by Russian and by word standards.” Most European countries are not
spending more than two percent of GDP on defense; the US spends 3.5 percent,
and only nine countries in the entire world are now spending more than four
percent.
Russia
“simply is not in a position” to spend that way for long, the economist says.
Moreover, its defense industry isn’t capable of modernizing that quickly. And
that suggests that the Kremlin is less interested in that than in supplying its
forces in Ukraine, something that could set the stage for a new attack in the coming
months.
Or
alternatively, Guriyev continues, it could simply be an indication that the
Ukrainian war is costing Putin far more than he counted on and that he will
have to find a way out.
Whatever
proves to be the case, he concludes, “Kudrin’s economic logic today is even
more just than it was on the day he was fired. If Russia in favorable times
couldn’t allow itself to spend up to four percent of GDP on defense,” then it
certainly can’t at a time when oil prices have collapsed and Western sanctions
have been imposed.
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