Paul Goble
Staunton, July 16 – Moscow media are
talking about BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in grand terms,
focusing on Russia’s turn away from the West to China, but they are neglecting
what may be the most important country in this region –Kazakhstan – which is
on its way to becoming “a new Singapore,” Vladislav Inozemtsev says.
In today’s “Vedomosti,” the director
of the Moscow Center for Research on Post-Industrial Society argues that Kazakhstan
may not yet be an Asian tiger, but it has chosen “an optimal path” for an
oil-rich former Soviet republic to a modern and “dynamically developing” economy
(vedomosti.ru/opinion/articles/2015/07/16/600818-novii-singapur-po-sosedstvu).
Kazakhstan, he says, “is not
Singapore, but neither is Russia. And therefore [its] experience is essentially
for important for [Russia] than is that of Singapore itself.” Indeed, he suggests, Kazakhstan offers “seven
basic lessons” for Russia, lessons which Moscow has so far failed to heed.
First of all, Inozemtsev says, “Kazakhstan
like Russia is a country with a raw materials economy,” and also like Russia,
Kazakhstan stressed the development of this advantage. But in contrast to
Russia, Kazakhstan opened itself to foreign investment, and now has benefitted
from the fact that it receives 10.5 times as much such investment from China
alone as does Russia.
Second, unlike Russia, Kazakhstan
defined its development strategy not only in quantitative terms but in
qualitative ones. Instead of simply seeking to boost its numbers in competition
with the West, as Russia has, Kazakhstan has sought to rise through the ranks
by changing itself and its economy.
Third, in contrast to Russia which
has sought to jump from a supplier of raw materials to an information economy,
Kazakhstan has chosen “the only possible gradual path.” It has developed its
raw materials sector, then it has been carrying out modern industrialization,
and only then has it begun to think about moving toward an innovation-based
economy.
That has led it to focus on boosting
investment generally and in infrastructure in particular, guaranteeing that
each step forward Kazakhstan takes will have the support it needs. Russia has
ignored that requirement, and consequently, many of its effort to jump ahead
have fallen short or failed utterly.
Fourth, although Kazakhstan has not
yet created a knowledge economy, the Moscow analyst continues, it has focused
on making investments in education and scientific research – while Russia has
cut back on both thus undermining further its future possibilities – and it has
integrated into the international scientific community rather than isolating
itself.
Fifth, and again in contrast to
Russia, Kazakhstan has organized its finances on the basis of an understanding
that it should not tax the extraction or export of raw materials in a way that
does not guarantee foreign firms the kind of profits they need to operate. Such
firms are invariably more interested in such profits than in new offices in the
center of Moscow.
Sixth, Inozemtsev says, “Kazakhstan
has for a long time followed a course which Russia is still not even willing to
think about, a course of careful cooperation with a whole range” of countries
which are “bigger players than it is.”
Moscow looks now at Washington, then at Europe and at Beijing. But
Astana tries to develop relations with all of them at once.
And seventh, Kazakhstan has acted on its geopolitical
possibilities, building highways, pipelines and railways between east and west
and north and south even while most people in Russia talk in grandiose terms about
becoming “a bridge between Europe and Asia.”
All seven of these principles have
not yet transformed Kazakhstan into “’a new Singapore,’” but it is obvious that
“the southern neighbor of Russia is an example of a new young state” which has
the chance to become one, something that can’t be said of most of the other
post-Soviet states and certainly can’t be said of Russia itself.
Russia still hasn’t devoted “sufficient
attention to its southern neighbor,” Inozemtsev says. Instead, it looks only at
the already great countries and thinks it will thus be in a position to teach
lesser ones. That approach has failed:
Today, Russia despite all its raw materials exports less than industrialized
Singapore.
When will Kazakhstan “surpass”
Russia? No one can say, Inozemtsev says;
but the fact that one can even ask that question now highlights Russia’s
continuing failure to learn from Kazakhstan.
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