#18 - JRL 2008-187 - JRL Home
Russia Profile
October 13, 2008
The State Horn of Abundance
Russia’s Duma Deputies Provide New Guarantees for Investors at the Prime
Minister’s Behest
By Dmitry Babich
As the financial crisis in the world shows no sign of subsiding, the Russian
government is taking unprecedented steps aimed at staving off what the experts
call “a run on the banks” in the country. In order to protect the small
investor, the Duma adopted a draft bill that will fully insure bank deposits
worth up to 700 thousand rubles the most the Agency on Deposits’ Insurance can
promise to give back to the depositor without endangering the insurance fund.
One stabilization measure comes hot on the heels of another, as television
and other government-controlled media avoid using words like “collapse” or even
“financial crisis,” preferring more soothing “decrease in activity” or
“pessimistic expectations.” On Friday, members of the State Duma, the lower
chamber of the Russian parliament, devoted all day to protecting the small
investors’ rights. In the morning, the deputies passed a draft bill which
increased the maximum bank deposit to be fully insured from 100 thousand rubles
($3,800) to 200 thousand ($7,600). Deposits exceeding 200 thousand rubles were
supposed to be insured at the level of 90 percent. Deposits exceeding 700
thousand were not supposed to be guaranteed.
But the rapidly changing situation on the financial markets is breeding
miracles. At noon, the Duma members adopted another draft bill, which extends a
100-percent insurance guarantee on deposits worth up to 700 thousand rubles.
Those investors who have bigger amounts of money in their deposits will get 700
thousand rubles from the Agency on Deposits’ Insurance (ASV).
The Prime Minister Vladimir Putin praised the deputies for their initiative,
which somehow happened to coincide with his own ideas aired during an occasional
interview. In Putin’s words, “The parliamentarians have revealed a responsible
approach, they quickly adopt the decisions suggested by the government and aimed
at preventing the dangers stemming from the global financial markets.”
According to the estimates of ASV’s Deputy General Director Andrei Melnikov,
the new law protects 98 percent of private deposit accounts in banks. “The
payments of up to 700 thousand rubles is the maximum of what the agency (ASV)
can offer without risking the stability of the insurance fund,” Melnikov said.
“Right now, Russian banks hold six thousand billion rubles ($229 billion), about
half of this money is kept in Sberbank. The increase of the insured amount to
700 thousand rubles must reassure the population.”
“The authorities understand that the developments on the global markets are
probably just the tip of the iceberg, and try to nip the investors’ panic in the
bud,” the Vremya Novostei daily commented on the Duma’s move.
In another move aimed at reassuring investors, this time the big ones, Putin
said that the state would buy 175 billion rubles worth of Russian companies’
bonds and securities before the end of the year. The move is supposed to support
the Russian stock market, which went into freefall several times during the last
month. The International Monetary Fund warned Russia against artificially
supporting the stock market, and Putin’s own finance minister Alexey Kudrin just
recently said that the state would not protect any company’s stocks. But the
premier decided otherwise, and so far none of his ideas went unheeded by the
parliament or President Dmitry Medvedev.
The chief analyst of Deutsche Bank Moscow Yaroslav Lisovolik said that there
was nothing special about these moves. “All over the world, the state gets more
and more often involved in the financial side of the economic activity, this
happens even in more economically developed countries than Russia,” Lisovolik
said. “The economists of Deutsche Bank even predict a sort of return to
Keynsianism a macroeconomic theory based on the understanding of the need of
the state’s regulatory activity in the economy.”
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