Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 26 – At a time when most
countries around the world have come up with and begun to implement plans to
prevent the coronavirus pandemic from destroying their economies, the Kremlin
has not yet elaborated any such anti-crisis program, a failure that opens the
way to disaster, according to Academician Abel Aganbegyan.
He made that point in an address to
an online conference on fighting the coronavirus without destroying the economy
that was organized by the Russian Academy of Economics and State Service (newizv.ru/article/general/26-04-2020/akademik-aganbegyan-v-rossii-do-sih-por-net-nikakoy-antikrizisnoy-programmy).
Aganbegyan who 35 years ago was a
close advisor for Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev made the following additional
points:
The
government must support businesses now closed because of anti-pandemic
measures. Otherwise, they will cease to pay their employees and go bankrupt. At
present, only 63 percent of Russians have any savings and so they will “simply
begin to starve.”
“Now,
30 percent of enterprises have stopped and are not paying anything to their
employees,” who mostly do not receive unemployment compensation either. The few who do get some of the lowest
payments of that kind in the world.
“There
is no sense that the government recognizes the depth of the crisis.”
“Twenty
million people today in Russia are at the edge of poverty with incomes of less
than 12,000 rubles (160 US dollars a month) … 65 percent of the poor are
working people.” That makes Russia “unique.” In other countries, the minimum
wage brings people out of poverty rather than keeps them in it.
Russians
pay a higher share of their incomes to service debt than do people in other
countries.
Optimistically,
Russia’s GDP will fall only five percent this year, but incomes will fall 10 to
20 percent, leaving 30 to 40 million people in poverty.
The
government has delayed releasing projections because it doesn’t want to face up
to the problem or have others see just how bad things are.
Russia
is devoting only four percent of its budget to fighting the economic crisis, while
in other countries that figure is far higher – 10 percent in the US, 14 percent
in Spain and 16 percent in France.
To
prevent disaster, Moscow must focus on saving the wages of all Russians and
adopt a global strategy rather than approach this issue piecemeal.
The
Central Bank needs to issue more money and cut interest rates.
The
current crisis is much deeper than the one in 2008-2009, but then the Kremlin
came up with a strategy. Now it hasn’t despite the fact that it has the
resources to do so via its reserve funds and public borrowing.
If
it doesn’t take such actions soon, Aganbegyan concludes, it may face “irretrievable
losses” and force the economy to begin not from even where it is now but from a
much worse place.
No comments:
Post a Comment