Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 23 – No sector of the
Russian economy has been hit harder by the combination of the pandemic and
economic crisis than transportation, a key part of the country’s infrastructure
and one whose problems must be addressed if Russia is to recover, according to
Russian economist Vladislav Inozemtsev.
“On the eve of the coronavirus
crisis,” he says, “the Russian transportation branch was in a relatively stable
situation.” Despite problems in other parts of the economy, those for the basic
segments of the transportation system were quite stable and in some cases even
promising (ridl.io/ru/glavnaja-zhertva-covid-19/).
More cargo was being carried by
railways, trucks and airplanes year on year, Inozemtsev says; and passenger traffic
was increasing by even larger numbers.
But “the coronavirus changed everything as not only the external borders
of Russia were closed, but the movement of people inside the country was
sharply cut back.”
In the first four months of the
crisis, the number of passengers being carried by rail fell 21.2 percent and
has fallen even further since. Cargo being carried by rail fell 7.2 percent
compared to the same period a year earlier, reflecting both declines in exports
and a reduction in production in many other branches.
Things have been much worse in Russian
aviation. Russia’s airlines carried more than 90 percent fewer passengers than
in the same period a year earlier. But the situation with trucks and buses has
been less dire. Cargo carried by truck
fell less than one percent, but passengers on buses fell by 21.3 percent. But increased
competition there has put many carriers in trouble.
“It has become clear,” Inozemtsev
argues, “that the chief strategy of the powers that be is to simply wait out
the coronavirus,” hoping for better times ahead before increasing poverty leads
to massive protests against the regime.
That is especially true regarding the transportation sector. It needs
massive help lest it become a multiplier of the economy’s problems.
The economic consequences of not
taking action soon in this and other sectors soon, “could be quite significant.”
Transportation needs government help, and the Russian economy needs Moscow to
give it lest problems in that sector limit the recovery.
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