Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 12 – In another
recrudescence of the 1990s when the ruble collapsed and thousands of local
governments and businesses issued their own script to deal with the lack of
physical currency and high inflation, Russia’s Cossacks have issued their own
currency with Vladimir Putin’s picture prominently displayed on it.
During the 1990s,
750 local and regional governments issued their own currencies to cope with the
economic crisis; and thousands more firms did the same thing. (For a
discussion, see “750 Republic and Local Governments in Russia Issued Their Own
Currencies in the 1990s” at windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2012/01/window-on-eurasia-750-republic-and.html.)
Now, faced with a new economic
crisis and with the collapse of the ruble, some outside Moscow may be about to
do the same thing, thus reversing one of Vladimir Putin’s drives to eliminate
what he views as a threat to Russia’s “common legal space” and even its
territorial integrity.
The Irbis Cossack community in St.
Petersburg has issued more than two million banknotes denominated in its own
currency but with pictures of Vladimir Putin on them (kazaki-irbis.ru/2015/08/04/dengi/).
That has prompted prosecutors and Bank of Russian experts to launch an
investigation (procspb.ru/news/spb/12622-prokuratura-sankt-peterburga-nachala-proverku-informacii-razmeshchennoy-v-smi-o-nachale-vypuska-pravoslavnym-soyuzom-kazakov-irbis-sobstvennoy-valyuty).
Physical
currency has become harder to come by, the Cossacks say; and the ruble is worth
far less than it was. Thus, they argue, it is time for groups like themselves
to issue their own currencies to help Russians pay for their daily needs (fontanka.ru/2015/08/10/128/). Not surprisingly, Russian officials do not
see it this way.
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