Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 15 – “The economy doesn’t
influence political processes in Russia,” Vladislav Inozemtsev says; and
politicians, both because of their hostility to business and the control the
security services have over it can’t take the steps necessary to free up the
economy and allow it to grow. Instead, the regime focuses on extracting ever
more money from it.
The recent change in the government,
the Russian economist says, was “a correct measure” because it signaled that
there was a desire to hold someone accountable for past failures, but the new
regime just like the old one “cannot unleash economic growth” as that would
require freeing the economy from the siloviki, something now “impossible.”
Consequently, the economy is
unlikely to improve significantly anytime soon; but, as this is critical,
Inozemtsev suggests, “serious political changes” have not been and will not be “provoked
by economic difficulties” (pugachevskoevremya.ru/vlast-schitaet-biznes-vragom-gosudarstva).
But what the regime is doing has
serious negative consequences as far as the economy is concerned. “The powers
are constantly increasing tax collections,” and that appears to be one of the main
reasons for the appointment of the new prime minister who had been quite
successful in doing that in his earlier position.
“For me,” Inozemtsev says, “it
remains a mystery why the Kremlin devotes such great importance to this: for
taxes are money collected in the final analysis from effective businesses and
handed out to bureaucrats who supposedly are in a position to invest this money
more effectively.”
But such tax collections don’t lead
to economic growth. Rather the contrary. If Putin would consider what his “friend
Donald” Trump has done, he would act differently. Trump unleashed economic growth
not by collecting more taxes but by cutting them. That is an axiom around the
world “but just not in Russia.”
There, the siloviki want the money
and their influence on the economy is not something the Russian government can
do anything about. The only thing it can hope for is a growth in export
earnings, and these are increasingly at risk because of changes in the international
marketplace.
In this situation, the most optimistic
projection for Russia is growth in the 1.0 to 1.5 percent range; and the most
pessimistic, a decline that could send personal incomes down 15 to 20 percent,
Inozemtsev says. But even this
is unlikely to have major political changes at least in the short and medium term.
On
the one hand, the Kremlin plans to continue to exploit Russian fears of a
return to the 1990s to ensure basic support for Putin’s remaining in power. And
on the other, it is eliminating things such as municipal elections which could
become the basis for political mobilization against it.
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