Paul Goble
Staunton, Mar. 4 – For the first 20
years of his reign, Putin relied on a social contract in which the people were
to remain loyal “in exchange for relative economic stability and the distribution
of rents from the sale of raw materials abroad.” But that is no longer
possible, according to a homemaker in the Urals writing anonymously.
Now, the regime is offering the
population something far more honest but also more brutal and less attractive,
she says, and that is “austerity in exchange for survival,” a deal that “sets
in motion processes which make the decolonization of the Russian empire as
currently configured inevitable” (region.expert/contract/).
According to her, “the
economic basis of the old contract has disappeared. The share of oil and gas
revenues in the budget has fallen below 20%, hydrocarbon revenues in January
fell to half of what they had been, and the overall deficit for the first month
has reached almost half of the annual plan.”
Moscow is
compounding this problem by taxing many who weren’t taxed before and by the redistribution
of money to support the war in Ukraine, two thing s which have “hit the middle
class and skilled workers in the regions harder than Moscow expected” – and that
is provoking anger and a greater willingness to protest, according to polls
taken by officials.
That is
leading to discussions not only among the populations of the federal subjects
but among the leaders of these oblasts, krays and republics over how much they
are giving to the center and how much they are receiving back. When the answer becomes
obvious, people and officials are talking about a revision of federal relations
or even complete independence.
The
Urals homemaker says that “the Russian Empire and the USSR maintained a
multinational space through the centralized redistribution of resources;” but
when that became impossible, the result was the same: “national and regional
elites bean to reassess the benefits of remaining part” of those states and
those states collapsed.
The
situation in the Russian Federation today differs not only in scale but in the
speed with which it is happening, she continues. “The war in Ukraine is
accelerating the depletion of resources while sanctions and declining revenues
from exports are making the restoration of the old model impossible.”
“The
Kremlin is attempting to compensate for the economic deficit with ideological
and repressive measures: the narrative of ‘patience for the sake of the front,’
the strengthening of the church's role in promoting ‘humility,’ and harsh
signals to governors about the need to maintain a "manageable background,"
the homemaker says.
“But in
regions with a strong identity and resource base, this narrative is causing
open irritation. In Tatarstan and Sakha, for example, voices are already being
heard calling for the need to protect their interests from a centralized ‘common
good,’ which increasingly looks like a unilateral expropriation.”
That
doesn’t mean that the Russian Federation is about to disintegrate in the
immediate future. “Decolonization here,” she says, “does not immediately mean
disintegration in the classical sense. It can manifest itself in milder forms
from de facto increased autonomy” to “demands for a revision of tax
arrangements” and a refusal to send taxes revenues to Moscow.
“But
even these "mild" scenarios undermine the imperial vertical: the
metropolis-center loses control over resources and loyalty. By 2026, the
Muscovite princes themselves have destroyed the main glue that held the system
together—the illusion of a mutually beneficial agreement,” she continues.
And she
concludes that the center’s new offer – “quiet survival in exchange for
increasing austerity” – “isn’t sustainable” in the long run in a multi-national
country. As more and more people in the federal subjects recognize what is
going on, they will be less and less willing to have it continue.