Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 15 – The Russian
government is delighted that oil prices are rising and that its earnings from
the sale of petroleum are allowing it to cover its budget, Valery Savelyev
says. But there is a downside to this: higher oil prices have significantly
reduced the pressure on the regime to engage in economic reform, making future
progress that much more unlikely.
When it appeared that oil prices
were heading below 40 US dollars a barrel, the Moscow commentator says, many in
Russia said that “such a price would make economic reforms in Russia inevitable”
and warned that if prices returned to above 50 US dollars “no reforms would
take place at all” (publizist.ru/blogs/33/24995/-
).
But somehow Russia muddled through and
now oil prices are approach 80 US dollars a barrel. That means, Savelyev says,
that there is money for the reform program Putin suggested but at the same
time, there are fewer pressures on him or anyone else to carry it out. Inertia works as far as he and they are
concerned.
In short, the economic commentator
says, “the rise in prices for oil is returning us to a situation when it is
possible to continue without making any principled changes;” and thus, the
pressure for all reforms is much less than it was a year ago. The only thing
that is pushing Moscow toward reform is its contest with the West; but that may
not prove to be enough.
As a result, the new higher prices
for oil may prove to be almost as much a curse this time around as the higher
prices for oil a decade and more ago were, a justification for not doing
anything because there is enough money around to keep dependent elites happy and
buy off those who are unhappy.
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