Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 16 – A major
problem confronting Vladimir Putin, Vyacheslav Kostikov says, is that he is
president not of one country but two and two with very different needs and
wants: an urban Russia that is doing relatively well and wants more freedom and
a rural Russia that is lagging behind and both needs and wants development more
than democracy.
That explains much of the difficulty
the Kremlin leader is facing in articulating a campaign program and in
preparing his message to the Federal Assembly, the former diplomat and
commentator says; and the difficulties of this division have grown over the
period of his rule (aif.ru/money/opinion/nayti_zabytuyu_rossiyu_kak_vdohnut_zhizn_v_depressivnye_regiony).
Many
of the programs that Putin has promoted have worked in the cities, Kostikov
suggests, thus pushing their population in one direction; but “the carrots” he
earlier employed to help the rural areas have disappeared, their populations
have suffered more as a result, and their prospects have deteriorated.
According
to Kostikov, “the country in fact is divided now into two unreal parts: the
larger part is in ‘the red zone’ of under-development, and this ever more
strongly influences the outcome of elections,” at least in part because polls
have shown that in the most underdeveloped regions (except for the North
Caucasus non-Russians) participation in voting is very low.
The
red zone, he continues, consists of the Russian North, Siberia, the Far East,
and Pskov, Smolensk, Yaroslavl, and Vladimir oblasts, all of which are lagging
behind the cities economically and none of which have good prospects for the
future unless there is an infusion of money from outside.
In
many cases, they are underpopulated and suffering from environmental problems
and from the collapse of the earlier GULAG economy which brought them
development but only at the cost of any freedom. “Under conditions of a market
economy, the problems of regional development and disproportions have become
even more difficult” to overcome.
But Russia must overcome these, especially in
the North, Siberia and the Far East because those are where the country’s
natural wealth is concentrated. These regions don’t contribute much to the
national GDP except for that; but their contribution in that regard is critical
to the development of everything else. They can be ignored only at the nation’s
peril.
Some
in Moscow look to China for money to develop these regions; but it is far from
clear, Kostikov says, that Chinese involvement would necessarily work for as
opposed to against Russian national interests.
It could even come to threaten Russian control given how few Russians
live in these territories – and how many Chinese live nearby.
Putin
clearly recognizes this, as he once famously remarked that “if in the near
future, we do not undertake practical steps for the development of the Far
East, then in a few decades, the Russian population there will speak Chinese,
Japanese and Korean.” But for him, there are more immediate problems than that.
“In
Russia,” Kostikov continues, “people love to talk about the future and
especially about the distant one.” That breeds all kinds of plans for that
future and no action in the immediate one. The Russian people can see this; and
Putin thus must find a way to address the problems of the two Russias at one
and the same time, a task that is anything but easy.
No comments:
Post a Comment