Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 16 – Even after the
coronavirus pandemic ends, Russia’s economy will not bounce back as many hope
not only because of sanctions, the worldwide recession and the collapse of oil
prices but because the structure of the Russian economy makes any recovery a
virtual impossibility, Vadim Zhartun says.
The Russian business analyst and
commentator says that the prospects for the country are so dire that it may
even happen that the Russian state will come to an end, not in the sense that
Russians will all die but that the existing structures will simply collapse
given their inability to prevent economic collapse (zhartun.me/2020/03/swanlake.html).
Up to now, he writes, “all was
arranged in Russia quite simply.” Oil and gas were extracted from the ground
and sold abroad under the direction of a small group of people defined by
Putin. This money went for three things: supporting that part of the population
that worked for the oil and gas companies and the government, creating the
appearance of economic and political progress through national projects, and
supporting siloviki of all kinds.
Private business was marginalized to
the service sphere or as a supporter of the oil and gas exporters. But as can
be seen, this system had “several inborn shortcomings,” and the current crisis
has both exposed and exacerbated them, Zhartun says.
First of all, the system as arranged
was very much at variance with Russian laws. That meant that the laws had to be
violated. Second, in this situation, the system has had to rely on “the
personal devotion” of its participants. And third, it gives rise not only to the
possibility of corruption but makes it inevitable and large-scale.
It is obvious, he continues, that “such
a system cannot exist forever in view of the objective conflicts of interest and
the lack of civilized mechanisms of balancing them (a parliament, courts) that
were thought up long ago by democratic societies” and that ensure their stable
operation.
Putin’s decision to arrange for
himself to be president for live “even more strongly destabilizes the system.” That
is because in the absence of clarity about how power will be transferred, the
members of the Russian establishment are driven to pursue “a liquidation
strategy,” one that avoids thinking about any long-term consequences for the
country.
That has the effect of deepening the
country’s dependence on oil and gas whose prices are falling, leading to ever
more illegal export of capital, and making it almost impossible that the
Russian economy will develop any other modernized sector. The coronavirus
pandemic will only exacerbate all of these things.
To see where Russia is and will be
if things continue as they are, one must consider the following package of its
unfortunate characteristics: an economy weak and bled dry by sanctions,
dependent on raw materials exports at a time prices for these are falling, and
an elite that seeks to save itself even at the cost of the country’s future.
“In such conditions,” Zhartun says, “any
domestic political excess may lead to a chain reaction; and after April 22, the
probability of that will only grow. After any mobilized voting, the ratings of
the powers fall – people do not like to feel deceived and raped,” and they have
the additional complaints arising from the handling of the coronavirus
pandemic.
According to the economic analyst, this
means that “the probability of the destruction of the system is very high, that
the period of the fantastic luck for the Russian authorities is coming to an
end, and that in 2021, Russia has ever chance to enter as an entirely different
country than it is today.”
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