Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 12 – Many Russians
believe that Dmitry Medvedev long ago retired the Marie Antoinette prize for
the most insensitive statement by a Russian official concerning the standard of
living of the Russian people, a prize he keeps reacquiring with claims that
things are getting better when in fact they are getting worse.
But it is quite possible that
Vladimir Putin may edge out his prime minister with a statement that he made
not long ago about Russians’ inability to afford cars given that prices for
them have risen and the incomes of Russians have fallen. He asked Khabarovsk
residents “Why do you need cars? You don’t have roads.”
Commenting on the state of the Russian
economy, Moscow commentator Aleksandr Nemets cites this remark in support of
his contention that all official claims notwithstanding, the Russian economy
isn’t coming out of the crisis. Instead, he says, it is mired in “a catastrophe”
from which no exit is visible (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58C55F1379F82).
Among the statistics he adduces to
make that argument are those showing a dramatic fall off in the sales of cars
and light trucks since 2012 and the collapse of the Russian GDP from 2.232
trillion US dollars in 2013 to 1.10 trillion US dollars this year, a decline of
50 percent, Nemets says.
The former figure put Russia above
India and Canada, although less than China and Brazil and sparked Moscow
propagandists to talk about “overcoming Germany.” But the latter one means that Russia has
fallen to 14th in the world, ahead of many developing countries but
far behind those it normally compares itself with.
Russian officials, of course,
contest these figures, claiming that the decline totaled only three percent
over that period. But their claims show only that Rosstat and other figures in
the Russian government simply lie, as any examination of the details of the
country’s economy show, including those on automobile sales which have tanked.
According to Rosstat, real per capita incomes
in Russia fell all of 15 or 16 percent, but it achieves those numbers only by
manipulating inflation rates and thus putting itself in a position to claim that
the declines in income and thus consumption were not as great as they in fact
have been.
If one uses the inflation estimates
of independent experts, per capita income fell over this period by 30 to 35
percent, more than twice what Moscow admits.
Retail trade fell by 30 percent, and investment over this period fell “at
a minimum” by 20 percent. State spending
as a whole didn’t fall, but social spending collapsed.
That reflects the fact that spending
on internal security and defense rose from 2.2 trillion rubles in 2013 to 3.8
trillion in 2016.
And all these catastrophic declines
become even more obvious if one focuses on those things that individual
Russians can feel in their daily life.
Among the ones Nemets cites are the following: Not only do Russians now
view a car once again as in Soviet times as a luxury, but a third of them lack
the money to buy cheese, sausage or fish.
That isn’t a crisis: it is a
catastrophe. Worse, it isn’t ending, Nemets concludes.
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