Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 8 – Russia does not
produce enough manufactured goods or have a large enough domestic market to
take advantage of the new wave of protectionism in the world, Sergey Shelin
says; and its government is unwilling or indeed unable to eliminate domestic
regulatory constraints on production that might lead to a boom.
As a result, and despite Kremlin
boosterism, Russia is not in a position to take advantage of either of the two
main economic changes now echoing through the world; but instead it will remain
isolated from and increasingly lag beyond the economies of other countries, the
Rosbalt commentator says (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2017/03/07/1597098.html).
At the same time, however, Russia
won’t be much affected by any growth in international protectionism because it
simply doesn’t produce enough manufactured goods or have a large enough market to
make a difference; and it doesn’t have the pressures on it to eliminate
domestic regulatory restrictions – or at least pressures that the Kremlin feels
the need to take seriously.
There is thus no basis for
considering that Russia might benefit from behaving like the US or China: it
simply isn’t in the same league. But “this doesn’t mean that we do not have any
models in the world,” Shelin argues, only that they are not countries Russia
typically likes to compare itself with – Myamnar, North Korea and Iran.
These are countries to exist by
isolating themselves from the international economy and that fall further and
further behind as a result. They don’t have
any chance of a great economic leap forward anytime soon – and neither, the
Rosbalt commentator says, does Russia, whatever its propagandists say.
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