Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 22 – Despite the
economic crisis, Duma deputies say, the Kremlin is continuing its “Robin Hood
in reverse” strategy, taking from the poor and giving to the rich, an approach
which was never popular even when the Russian economy was growing but now is
highly offensive when it is not.
On Wednesday, “Nezavisimaya gazeta”
reported that the Audit Chamber had found that the finance ministry had handed
out more than ten billion dollars in the last year to firms without adequate
checks, a figure more than the ministry said it had to cut the indexation of
pensions because of budgetary problems (ng.ru/economics/2015-08-20/1_budget.html).
As it often does on what it views as
a hot political issue, the Regions.ru news agency interviewed six Russian
parliamentarians from various political parties on their reactions to this
report about government finances and on what they believe needs to be done to
correct the situation (regions.ru/news/2557692/).
Anton Ishchenko, an LDPR deputy on the
Duma budget and taxation committee, says that “what is happening today with
budget investments is explained by the absence of the necessary control and
perhaps by the lack of desire for such control to be put in place.” As a
result, money is being handed out “corruptly” and no one knows where it is
going.
He adds that his fraction has
proposed expanding Duma oversight over the dispersal of funds but “unfortunately,
all our proposals” in that regard “have not found any positive response” from
the government. Clearly, there are officials prepared to take the last kopeck
from pensioners and hand out big money to their friends instead.
At a time of crisis, Ishchenko
continues, “this is simply a challenge to the entire society,” one that can
lead to “destabilization” as has happened in Armenia recently. “No one is
ensured from such a reaction by the simple people” in Russia. Instead, the
government is making the possibility of such an explosion ever greater.
Nikolay Ryzhkov, a senator from
Belgorod and member of the Federation Council’s federalism committee, says that
it is a mistake to blame the finance ministry for this: it is simply the
executor of what the government as a whole has decided upon. That of course
makes the problem bigger rather than smaller because the government is then
responsible for this.
Oksana Dmitriyeva, an SR deputy n
the Duma budget and taxes committee, says that as a result of this report, “the
mechanism of budgetary investments undoubtedly must be changed” in order that
such things not happen again. And she suggests that this will require reopening
questions of privatization and investment in such privatized enterprises as
well.
She points out that the system has
been broken for a long time. In 2008, for example, “more than half of
budget-backed investments were directed” not for real investments but to cover
debts or purchase shares, despite what the authorities said. That is not how
the country’s economy should be run.
Vladimir Petrov, a United Russia
deputy who serves as first deputy chairman of Federation Council’s budget and
financial markets committee, says that budgetary investments are justified but
that they should be more carefully controlled than they have been up to now.
Valery Zubov, an SR Duma deputy on that
chamber’s transportation committee, says that what the report shows is that
there has taken shape in Russia “a surrogate investment system,” with moneys
taken from the population and given to enterprises without any consideration of
effectiveness only short-term profit.
The system is inherently corrupt, he suggests, because “nowhere
is the procedure for disbursing money written down.” The Audit Chamber needs to have its authority
expanded so that it can root out such activities. That is all the more the case
because “the actions of such a surrogate investment system are a serious
destabilizing factor,” especially if they lead to cutbacks in funding for
pensions and social needs.
And Vasily Ikonnikov, a KPRF deputy
on the Duma committee for regional policy, says that this problem reflects a
broader problem, one that can only be solved by a change in the government as a
whole. That is the only way to avoid destabilization: change the government now
and step up the fight with corruption.
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