Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 27 – At a time when
many are focusing on Vladimir Putin’s efforts to expand Russian dominance over
the former Soviet space, Igor Nikolayev argues that in fact, Russia is “losing
the CIS” because of what another writer calls foreign trade “separatism,” the
increasing tendency of its members to trade outside even of the Eurasian
Economic Community.
In a commentary for Ekho Moskvy, the economist says that one
might have expected a leader like Vladimir Putin who has called the demise of
the USSR a greater geopolitical catastrophe than the world wars or the Russian
revolution to have sought to reverse things; but in face, he hasn’t done so, at
least in economics (echo.msk.ru/blog/nikolaev_i/2395589-echo/).
In 2000, the year Putin came to
office, Russian exports to CIS countries represented 13.4 percent of all
Russian sales abroad. Last year, they formed 12.1 percent. CIS member country
exports to Russia fell by a factor of three, from 34.3 percent in 2000 to only
11 percent last year. Thus, the
importance of CIS countries as far as trade is concerned fell sharply.
To be sure, Russia still has a positive
trade balance with the other CIS countries, 54.6 billion US dollars in earnings
from sales to them as opposed to26.2 billion US dollars in purchases from them.
Russia is happy about this disparity, Nikolayev continues, but other CIS countries
are not.
Between 2000 and 2018, the decline in the
importance of trade with Russia has been especially great with Moscow’s largest
trading partners: with Belarus here the Russian share of exports fell from 84.3
percent to 38.5 percent, with Kazakhstan where it declined from 19.5 percent to
8.5 percent, and with Ukraine here it fell from 34.5 percent to 7.7 percent.
Equivalent falloffs occurred over this
period for these countries as far as imports from Russia were concerned: for
Belarus, from 92.3 percent to 59.2 percent; for Kazakhstan, from 48.7 percent
to 38.1 percent; and for Ukraine, from 26.2 percent to 14.2 percent, Nikolayev
continues.
These trends cast doubt on any effort to
make the CIS something more than it currently is, a place for leaders of an
ever-decreasing number of heads of former Soviet republics to meet and talk.
More immediately, they show that the CIS “is not a priority for Russia” or for
any of the other member countries: we are ever more distancing ourselves from
one another.”
Clearly, the CIS is not going to lead to
the restoration of the USSR “in its former form,” Nikolayev says. But more than
that, these figures suggest that any union based on that territory isn’t going
to occur. “We are losing [the CIS]” economically, however much some in the
Kremlin ant to think otherwise.
A second commentator, Aleksey Chichkin,
goes further: even in the narrow Eurasian Economic Community, any possibility
for tighter economic union is currently threatened by” foreign trade
separatism” as member states increasingly look to others beyond this union for
trade (ritmeurasia.org/news--2019-03-26--sojuz-pod-pressingom-vneshnetorgovogo-separatizma-41785).
No comments:
Post a Comment