Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 16 – Like his
Soviet predecessors, Vladimir Putin loves to promote giant projects that
attract a great deal of attention. His latest is to build a bridge between the
Russian mainland and Sakhalin Island, a project that will attract enormous
international attention and allow him to give out more state funds to his
corrupt supporters.
But both despite and because of such
projects – and this one comes even though the bridge to Crimea is not yet
finished (bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-15/putin-treads-where-stalin-failed-with-mega-project-in-the-works) – independent Russian experts say their country’s construction
industry is “more dead than alive” (svpressa.ru/realty/article/183562/).
The construction ministry continues
to put out upbeat claims, but statistics show that the overall changes in the
economy have not had the consequences for the construction industry that many
predicted and that in fact, except for figures boosted by increases in cost for
elite housing, there have been significant declines in amount of new housing
and even prices for other kinds.
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