Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 19 – In a lecture
on how Russia’s regions are surviving the crisis, Natalya Zubarevich says there
is a dollop of good news: for all the talk of standardization and a single
power vertical, the regions are displaying one of the most important aspects of
federalism: a differentiated approach to the problems that the crisis has
created or exacerbated.
The director of regional programs at
Moscow’s Independent Institute for Social Policy and a leading Russian experts
on the region says that unfortunately this positive news has been overwhelmed
by the general impact of the crisis (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/11/18/70588-kak-vyzhivayut-rossiyskie-regiony-v-krizis-lektsiya-natali-zubarevich).
Because
of differences in resources, political leadership and relationships with
Moscow, Russia’s regions have varied widely in response to all the earlier
post-Soviet crises as well, she points out. But their continuing variation may
surprise some given the efforts Vladimir Putin has made to standardize them via
his much-ballyhooed power vertical.
Now,
however, because they are running out of money and have few places to get more,
the leaders of the regions are having to balance the need to cut social
spending with the risk of sparking protests if they go too far, and in
navigating this “Scylla and Charybdis,” Zubarevich says, it is likely that some
regions will err in one direction and tohers in different ones.
Making
those choices will be even more difficult because in the face a new plunge in
the total number of Russians, some regions are going to lose more than others,
and because given that defense spending may ultimately have to be cut, those
regions which rely on that now are going to see their economic situation
deteriorate still further.
No
longer able to count on oil as a source of income for the state, Moscow is
increasingly trying to extract resources from the only other immediately
available source, the population itself, by cutting social spending and
increasing taxes and user fees of one kind or another, the regional expert
points out.
The
regions can be counted on to vary in their responses to this, she says, and in
her long speech, she provides the kind of data about incomes, investment, and
resources that the leaders of Russia’s regions are going to hve to work with in
what are certain to be difficult times over the next several years.
And
that in turn means that over the course of this period some regions are likely
going to be the site of protests while others will appear to be quiescent.
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