Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 28 – With regard to
Russia’s regions, there is only one thing the Kremlin fears more than their
pursuit of independence or rejection of its plans to amalgamate them and that
is efforts by some of them to unite from below without regard for and indeed in
opposition to Moscow.
When the Soviet Union collapsed,
various oblasts and krays formed regional groupings like the Siberian
Agreement, a trend that threatened Moscow’s control over the periphery of the
country more than any one of them could. As scholars pointed out at the time,
countries with relatively few component parts are more likely to fall apart
than those with many.
First under Boris Yeltsin and more
recently under Vladimir Putin, Moscow has worked hard to restore the situation in
which oblasts, krays and republics must look first to Moscow and not to
neighboring areas, except when the Kremlin wants to combine them or oversee
them with its federal districts.
But the virtues of regional
cooperation, although invariably played down by Moscow and Moscow-centric
analysts, are great, and there are indications that the growing economic crisis
in the Russian Federation is leading at least some in the regions to think
about new combinations that would unite from below what Moscow has been unable
to force together from above.
In a commentary on Newsbabr.ru,
Matvey Bagrov pointedly asks “Will there be a unification of Buryatia, Irkutsk
Oblast and the Trans-Baikal Kray?” and suggests that there are good reasons
that local governments, local businesses and the local populations should want
that to happen (newsbabr.com/?IDE=137328).
The Russian commentator’s brief
discussion of this possibility focuses on the current problems of the Buryat
Republic and why its leaders and people should favor such a solution, an
approach that may make progress toward the goal of unification more difficult
given Buryat unhappiness with the inclusion of two Buryat districts in the
other two federal subjects.
But the argument Bagrov makes has a
more general application elsewhere in the Russian Federation and thus is worth
recounting as a straw in the wind about how hard-pressed areas across the
country are now thinking about extreme steps they might take or be forced to
take to deal with the current crisis.
According to the Babr.com
commentator, “the economy of the Buryat Republic leaves much to be
desired. By 2017,” he says, “the
republic won’t be living but only surviving,” given that it has a much lower
standard of living, much lower savings rate, and much lower credit rating than
its neighbors. Moreover, its schools and housing are much worse too.
“The market of internal reserves is
devilishly small,” he says, as is the market in goods and services, and “in the
republic are extremely limited or completely absence the resources needed for
independent resolution of the problems of development.”
The Buryat authorities, Bagrov
continues, “understand the extent of the problems perfectly well. But there is
a resolution of the problems of the crisis” there that they may not have
thought about sufficiently. That is “the
unification of Buryatia, the Trans-Baikal kray and Irkutsk oblast. This would
be a first and major step to modernization.”
“Unification would allow the use of
the advantages of each region and their variety at the level of a macro-region.
Access to all kinds of resources of all three regions would allow to boost such
branches of industry as machine building, metal fabrication, and reprocessing.
And all serious issues of the region would be solved together. And people would
find it easier to live.”
“The most important thing,” Bagrov
says, is that “the initiative must be taken by the population, by the
businesses of the subjects and by the executive power. By the 2017 elections in
the Buryat Republic, there must be a pre-election program about the realization
of measures of ‘a road map’ of integration.”
If that happens, he says, it will
make possible “the preparation and carrying out of a referendum of the population
of the three regions concerning the formation of a macro-region. All three
regions are unique from all points of view,” Bagrov argues, “and the new macro-region
must gain all this uniqueness.”
Nothing may happen with this idea:
each regional government is jealous of its prerogatives even if the population
would be better off in a larger unit, and Moscow may very well try to hijack
such notions and proclaim that this all constitutes a popular demand to restart
Putin’s stalled regional amalgamation plan.
But the very fact that economic
conditions in the federal subjects are now so bad that this idea is being
floated simultaneously highlights just how difficult things are beyond Moscow’s
ring road and how some in those places are thinking about solutions that could
take them in very different directions than Moscow wants.
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