Paul Goble
Staunton,
Oct. 22 – Many Russian liberals believe that reductions in oil and gas
consumption in the West will undermine the Putin regime and force the country
to modernize, Vladislav Inozemtsev says. “From the point of view of abstract
logic of economic development, this is indeed the case.”
But,
the Moscow economist says, that kind of modernization is possible only in the
case of an economy “open to the world.” And that is not Moscow’s approach.
Instead, it is “today following an entirely different path, and it certainly
will not open up to those who would undermine its foundations” (ridl.io/ru/nepredvidennye-posledstvija-dekarbonizacii/
Consequently,
Inozemtsev continues, “if the decarbonization process gathers speed, we will
see … in Russia, [the return of] political totalitarianism and the planned
economy from which it had appeared we escaped thirty years ago. That is why,
despite price and demand fluctuations, the country’s economy and the well-being
of its ruling class can’t be undermined.”
Because
that is so, the Russian ruling class is calm and even self-satisfied about the
situation and is focusing only on controlling inflation within the country,
using the only tools of “administrative control it knows – from anti-monopoly
measures to ‘skimming off excess profits,’” neither of which bodes well for
modernization of the country.
“As long as the EU does not become an ‘environmentally friendly’ and
‘carbon-neutral’ zone,” Inozemtsev says, “revenues to the Russian treasury from
the extractive industries will increase in parallel with the weakening of the
role of export-oriented manufacturing industries, accompanied by highly
original experiments carried out by the authorities.”
And that in turn means that “Russia may turn out to be even more
dependent on commodities than it was at the beginning of the Putin era. This,
coupled with clearly visible trends in domestic politics, is fraught with several
quite unexpected consequences,” the economist continues.
When China faced a decline in the growth of foreign demand, it adopted
policies aimed at expanding domestic consumption and demand; but Russia’s
approach will be very “different.” A fall in exports for oil, gas and metals
can be offset in its case “only by an increase in the production of relatively
useless industrial products.”
“Russia produced almost as much oil and gas in 2019 as the RSFSR did in
1989, and while the USSR exported 32% of its oil and 18% of its gas at the time, the figures for Russia in
2019 were 71.7%
and 34.6%, respectively.
For coal exports, the difference is even greater: 4.8% in 1989 and 44.8% in 2019.”
Moreover, Inozemtsev says, “Russia is not just an oil addict. In
addition, it is still quite firmly tied precisely to the economies of countries
which have declared ambitious decarbonization goals.” That means it will have
to refocus its sales to countries in Asia and Africa “not too closely bound by
trade relations with the EU and North America.”
Competition for these markets will be intense because production and use
of hydrocarbons is likely to increase there for some time, but this market will
be especially risky because these are less solvent customers. If and when they
cannot pay, that can have serious consequences for economic actors in Russia as
well as in the West.
No comments:
Post a Comment