Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 22 – The latest
call to move the Russian capital from Moscow to east of the Urals (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/08/krupnov-proposes-shifting-capital-to.html)
has sparked discussion even though most say the idea isn’t new and won’t ever
be realized (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/08/history-suggests-cheaper-ways-to-get.html).
But the most important aspect of
this discussion is not about a possible move to Irkutsk or Novosibirsk or
someplace else but about the fateful role that a Russian capital wherever it
might be inevitably plays for the country as a whole and in particular for the
region in which it is situated.
Siberian historian Yury Chernyshev
notes that proposals to shift the Russian capital from Moscow to a city in
Siberia have become a commonplace, something used for PR purposes or to
distract attention from real problems. “None of the current ‘elite’ of course,
will voluntarily move to Siberia,” so these ideas are going nowhere (regnum.ru/news/polit/2312215.html).
At the same time, there is a real
problem that lies behind such talk, he continues: “All Russia now is divided
between Moscow and not-Moscow,” the result of Kremlin actions that have made
federalism meaningless and that have sucked the best and the brightest out of the
regions to the center, while allowing them to give orders and demand reports
from the subjects.
As a result, Chernyshev says, there
has been an even greater bureaucratization of the state apparatus than there
was in the Soviet nomenklatura, and this in turn has frozen the development of the
country and especially weakened its eastern regions where it is most difficult
for people to survive.”
Vladislav Inozemtsev, a Moscow
economist and commentator provides some additional discussion on what he calls “the
dangers of de-Muscovization,” a process that he suggests ignores what the real
problems of Russian administration now are and what needs to be done to correct
them rather than just moving the capital city (snob.ru/selected/entry/128172).
Everyone should recognize that “the
concentration of resources in the places most favorable for life is a natural worldwide
tendency and [that] the chance for resettling millions of people in the tundra
or the desert has disappeared since GULAG times,” Inozemtsev continues. The
question people should be asking is very different.
How can Russia create conditions in
which there are dozens of such cities which “could become “’anchors’ for people
who don’t want to live in villages” and
who would be quite content to live in a mid-sized city if it had all the
features of modern life and a modicum of financial and political power.
Such a situation, of course, could
arise “only under conditions of financial and political decentralization, the
improvement of standards of living in the regions, and the weakening of the
attractiveness not of Moscow as the capital but of the capital as such,
wherever it might be located.”
That “will not be decided by
transferring capital functions or changing the headquarters of state
corporations,” he says. What is needed is that “business, intellectual centers,
and mass media arise in the provinces rather than being ‘imposed’ there from
the center. The most important condition for this is a rejection of vozhdizm, ‘the ‘tsarist’ tradition of
our rule.”
“Moving the capital will not solve
the problems of federalism.” What has to happen is htat the regions need to
receive “or better” demand the right to oppose Moscow, to elect governors and
mayors without the center having any say, and to manage their finances with a
far greater accent on regional priorities.”
In short, “the basis of a real ‘de-Muscovization’
must be a new Federative treaty, in which the capital would not be a subject –
a good example is Washington, which fulfills the functions of a capital but
does not have any representation in the Congress of the United States,”
Inozemtsev continues.
“If Russia were to become a genuine
federation, one created from below rather than imposed from above,” then all
relations between the center and the periphery and the meaning of the center
would change, and the issue of where the capital should be would become
something of secondary interest.
Inozemtsev explores a number of other reasons
why simply moving the capital will do nothing to solve Russia’s problems. Among
these is his observation that shifting the capital to Siberia “would neutralized
the reformist potential of Siberia by killing in the cardle any attempts at
decolonization of the still existing empire.”
Moreover, such a shift would lead to
a new emphasis on raw materials rather than high tech as the basis of the
economy and make Russia more Asian and less European. People should remember that “greater
democracy or respect for law never has come to Russia from the East” and wouldn’t
this time around.
Moscow for all its problems is like
a large diamond, “one of the main glories of Russia.” Dividing it up or
shifting its function to somewhere else would be like breaking it into pieces.
Much would be lost and the resulting multiplicity would be worth far less than
the single gem. The task, he says, is to
create a setting for Moscow by building a federation from below.
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