Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 15 – With
transfer payments from center to regions, Moscow is fighting regional
inequality driven at least in part by the fear that if it doesn’t, there is a
risk that the Russian Federation will disintegrate, Natalya Zubarevich says;
but it should be fighting inequality between Moscow and everywhere else and
among social groups.
In a major address to the Adam Smith
Conference in Moscow, the Moscow State University specialist on regional
economics says that in Russia, “weak regions regularly receive subsidies from the
federal budget but life in them doesn’t change” and won’t until they find “their
own competitive advantages” (lenta.ru/articles/2018/11/14/neravenstvorf/).
That will be possible only if the
central government allows the regions both more freedom of action and greater
control over the money they earn and taxes they control. Otherwise, Moscow and the
oil-producing regions will grow but all others will lag behind and hold back
the development of Russia as a whole.
Still worse, Zubarevich continues,
the lack of the opportunities that such a shift would make possible means that
in the regions, people do not yet think about developing the kind of competitive
advantages that would allow them, and with them, the country, to become drivers
of the economy. Instead, the periphery remains paternalistic in its attitudes.
“Russia’s problem,” she says, “is
not in inequality” of the regions but in the existence of “a gigantic middle,
which doesn’t move or change because of “poor institutions and the lack of obvious
advantages,” conditions that will continue until Moscow loosens its hold on the
regions rather than tries to make all of them equal while doing little about
social inequality.
Around the world, countries which
are trying to catch up with the most advanced economies and polities “bet on
strong regions” but also work to reduce inequality of incomes in the
population. Russia today does just the reverse, Zubarevich continues; and then people
are surprised that the system doesn’t escape from poverty over all and develop
more rapidly.
And a major reason that is the case is
that many in Moscow fear that if some regions race ahead and others lag significantly
behind, something that will be true if controls and interregional transfers are
reduced, that in and of itself will create the conditions for the
disintegration of the country.
Overcoming that fear and taking the
steps necessary to allow for development won’t be easy, the regional specialist
says; but that is the only way that Russia has a chance to move forward toward
a better life for succeeding generations. Otherwise it will have a rich capital
city and poverty almost everywhere else.
Meanwhile, there are three other
pieces of dispiriting economic news from Russia this week:
·
First, it was reported that last year, Russian flagged
merchant ships carried only 3.5 percent of the seaborne imports and exports
from the country, down from 53 percent in 1980 and a share equivalent too what
it was at the start of the 18th century. The loss of earnings from that decline
is equivalent to all the money Moscow
earns from foreign arms sales (newizv.ru/news/economy/12-11-2018/tsifra-dnya-torgovyy-flot-rossii-vernulsya-v-nachalo-18-veka).
·
Capital
flight is accelerating. According to
official statistics, 42.2 billion US dollars have left Russia in the first ten
months of this year, up from 14 billion US dollars in the same period a year
earlier, with 10.1 billion US dollars occurring in October alone. Russia is on
track to see up to 66 billion US dollars of capital flight for the year as a
whole (kommersant.ru/doc/3798385
and finanz.ru/novosti/aktsii/rossii-grozit-samy-masshtabny-ottok-kapitala-s-2014g-grafik-1027719294).
·
Moscow is currently fixated on “de-dollarizing” the
Russian economy, but a far larger problem, economist Khazbi Budunov, editor of
the Telegram Channel Politeconomics, says, is falling domestic demand as people
have less money to spend and are less willing to invest given the darkening economic
picture of Russia under sanctions (eadaily.com/ru/news/2018/11/14/glavnyy-risk-dlya-rossii-ne-krah-dollara-a-padenie-sprosa-ekspert).
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