Paul Goble
Staunton,
July 16 – Although many in Russia and the West forget it, “Moscow is not Russia,”
Pavel Pryanikov says. The economic crisis has in some ways brought the Russian
capital and the regions together in common suffering. But the city in one way stands in complete
contrast to the rest of the country: it is today “the only place of optimism in
Russia.”
In
part, the editor of the Tolkovtel portal says, this can be explained by the
fact that a far higher percentage of Muscovites are employed in government
institutions than is the case in the entire rest of the Russian Federation, 36
percent to 27 percent respectively (ttolk.ru/articles/moskva_ostalas_edinstvennyim_mestom_optimizma_v_rossii).
And both this greater role of the
state and the optimism it gives rise to explains something else: “Five years
ago, Moscow was the epicenter of protests with demands for essential change,
but now Moscow is a region with the lowest level of demands for change and the
highest support for the government course of strengthening stability.”
These developments and especially
the shift in Moscow as far as protests are concerned is reported in a joint
study, The Capitals and Regions of
Contemporary Russia: 15 Years Later, conducted by the Moscow Institute of
Sociology and the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung that has just been published.
The reason for this divide between
Moscow and the regions, the study says, is to be found not only in the much
higher incomes of Muscovites compared to all others but also in the fact that
the Moscow city government is in a position to provide subsidies of various
kinds to residence, something regional governments lack the funds to do.
That generates both stability and
optimism, the study continues; but it is also producing something else: the far
greater survival of paternalistic and even archaic social patterns in the capital
than in many other places, exactly the reverse of what many have assumed to be
the case but a pattern that provides real support for the current regime.
No comments:
Post a Comment