Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 22 – Vladimir
Putin has not changed Russian society as much as many think, Dmitry Milin says,
because he “is simply the product of Russian society.” Consequently, even if he
is replaced by someone like Aleksey Navalny, little or nothing will “change for
the better.”
Among Russians, the Moscow
commentator argues, 30 to 40 percent of the population are “conformists who
will always vote for those in power, 20 to 30 percent are on the left, and 30
to 50 percent are on the right from the nationalists to the liberals. As a
result, the prospects for change regardless of who is president are small (blog.newsru.com/article/21feb2020/forecast).
In many ways, this is a reflection
of an updated version of one side of the debate which animated many in Soviet
times: with Milan arguing as many did in the past that Sovietism was the
product of the Russian tradition in opposition to those who suggested that it
was strictly the product of communist rule.
According to
Milin, “the only thing that unites a majority is the rejection of corruption in
the upper reaches of the powers that be.” Navalny has used this too good
effect, “but by itself the struggle with corruption cannot lead to a
flourishing of the country,” although it would certainly result in a reduction
in the crudity of the leadership.
Consequently, he continues, “the
replacement of the president (even for Navalny) would not be any rapid improvement.
The struggle with corruption will take years if not decades.” And there is no
guarantee that Navalny would not adapt to the rules of the game at the top much
as Putin has.
Putin’s national projects like
Andropov’s and Gorbachev’s “acceleration” 40
years ago “will not give any results.. The money will simply be spent
ineffectively.” The same is true for import substitution. It will only accelerate
losses and lead to a decline in the incomes of many Russians.
Real economic reforms, the blogger
argues, “if they begin to be introduced also will not lead to the rapid growth
of the economy and a rise in the standard of living. Instead, they will lead in
the first two to five years to a significant decline in incomes. The path to
flourishing lies not through the president” but in production of saleable goods
and that requires hard work.
Just redistributing incomes from the
sale of raw materials abroad won’t do the trick either, Milin continues. “Russia
is not a Norway with five million people.
Russia must produce competitive
goods, stealing designs from abroad if necessary. But those designs won’t help much either
unless there is a new work ethic among Russians. For the country to flourish, “a
minimum of the majority of the population” will have to work harder than it
does now.
That will be hard to achieve given
that “man is mortal and often suddenly so.” And consequently, Russians should
stop living with “unachievable hopes for a rapid improvement in the situation.
Only the bad can happen quickly; the good always takes a long time, is
complicated, and requires effort.”
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