Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 8 – By common
consent, those born near the end of Soviet times or after 1991 in the
post-Soviet states are very different from their elders, but until recently,
such people were focused on getting an education and starting careers rather
than on broader questions, Yevgeny Gontmakher says.
But now these people, now between 25
and 35, are becoming increasingly angry at what they see as aging and out-of-touch
rulers, the Moscow economist says. They have already changed the political
landscape in Ukraine, are in the process of doing so in Belarus, and will
eventually do so in Russia as well (mk.ru/politics/2020/09/07/molodezh-protiv-stareyushhikh-elit-chto-zhdet-belorussiyu-i-rossiyu.html).
There are two “fundamental causes”
for this, Gontmakher continues. The first is economic stagnation, brought on by
different things in each of these three countries but producing something common
to them all: the absence of prospects for advancement and growth among younger
people and their natural resentment at those above them who control things.
The second factor is globalization
and the influence of the West not only via the Internet but via direct
comparison. Millions 25 to 35-year-olds
in these countries have visited the West and can see how much better people in
those countries have it than they do. This has been especially important in Ukraine
and Belarus both because of geography and culture.
But regardless of Moscow’s efforts
to cut people off from such experiences, it has having an impact on this cohort
of Russians as well and consequently will have a similar impact on the
political system if not this year than very soon, Gontmakher argues. The
differences between the aging elite and the rising generation are simply too
great for this not to happen.
If those in power do not recognize
this and begin reforms, there is a great risk that things will fall part like “a
house of cards” as they did in Russia in the early 1990s, in Ukraine in
2013-2014, and, Gontmakher says he fears may be the case now in Belarus, where
aging elites held on too long and younger people simply weren’t prepared to
wait any longer.
What is needed, he suggests, is not
simply the replacement of older leaders with younger ones but an organized
transition “from the current archaic and essential feudal state to contemporary
basic institutions of a European type, obviously with national distinctions and
historical paths of each being taken into account.”
There are examples of this in
Central Europe, including Poland and Hungary, and also in a number of Latin
American countries. And however much aging elites resist, a rising generation
will have its way either by changing the nature of the country in which it
lives or by being coopted and keeping that country from joining the modern world.
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