Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 12 – In the past, Moscow viewed many villages and small cities as
being without a future, Boris Kagarlitsky says. Now, the central government is
increasingly inclined “to write off major cities” and even entire regions. In
the future, he suggests, the center may view the entire country beyond the ring
road that way.
In
comments to the Regnum news agency, the director of the Moscow Institute for
Globalization and Social Movements says that conclusion is justified by the
contents of the just-announced Strategy
for the Spatial Development of the Russian Federation Up to 2025 (regnum.ru/news/economy/2480531.html).
The left-of-center
Moscow commentator says that this strategy paper “does not include in the list
of prospective major centers of economic growth” Arkhangelsk. That city is reduced
in its pages to being only “an administrative center of a federal subject” and
thus slated under the terms of that document to become ever less important to
the country as a whole.
“The situation with regard to the
Russian North is beginning to deteriorate in all directions,” Kagarlitsky says.
“On the one hand, [government officials] say that the Arctic must be mastered because
there are many valuable natural resources there that can help Russia as a whole
develop.
But “on the other hand, there is no
money for serious work in that direction; [and] even if there were, such funds are
to be concentrated in a small number of places and growth points which by themselves
will be insufficient in order to improve the situation not only of the regions
generally but of those points themselves.”
Perhaps the best that can be hoped
for is that this strategy paper will bring incomes to those who compiled it and
then the report itself will be put on the shelf to be ignored completely from
now on, Kagarlitsky says. But its basic thrust reflects Moscow’s views and
these are hardly good for the regions or the country as a whole.
The Russian Far East provides a
clear example of what he is talking
about. Vladimir Putin is promising to make that region a growth leader, but his
policies, as documented by Aleksandra Koshkina of Profile, are having the opposite effect, emptying the region of
people, destroying the economy, and opening the way for the Chinese to come in
(profile.ru/obsch/item/126790-tak-khorosho-azh-uekhat-khochetsya).
No comments:
Post a Comment