#8 - JRL 2008-188 - JRL Home
Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 5, Number 196
October 14, 2008
RUSSIA COUNTS ITS BLESSINGS IN THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL
CRISIS
By Pavel K. Baev
A distinct note of triumph is entering the statements of Russian officials on
the scale and possible consequences of the global economic crisis. It is
President Dmitri Medvedev who was doing most of the talking last week, while his
“senior partner” Prime Minister Vladimir Putin devoted his attention to problems
of cinematography and ice hockey but mostly to his new pet, a tiger cub (Moskovsky
komsomolets, Kommersant, October 11). Medvedev was the “guest star” at the Evian
conference organized by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, then rubbed shoulders
with “comrades-colleagues” at the summit of the Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS) in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, and finally rushed to Severomorsk to
observe the Northern Fleet exercises (Vedomosti, 8 October).
Medvedev’s increasingly confident discourse on the unfolding disaster
includes a bit of self-congratulation (he had indeed started to crow about it
before any Western leader was able to utter the word “crisis”), a healthy dose
of anti-Americanism (there is hardly any doubt in his audiences where the blame
belongs), and much bragging about Russia’s indispensable role (Finance Minister
Alexei Kudrin was invited to the emergency meeting of his G7 counter-parts in
Washington). This confidence might appear at odds with the “reality check” of
Russian stock exchange, which has lost two thirds of its value (or about $1
trillion) since the peak in June and was still looking for a bottom last Friday
(Kommersant, October 11).
This catastrophic “correction” has so far remained an abstract notion for the
vast majority of Russians who have only vague ideas about shares or dividends,
so as many as 57 percent of respondents to a poll expressed little concern about
banks but named inflation as the main problem (www.newsru.com, October 9).
Consumer prices indeed continue to climb even as signs of an economic slowdown
appear in such credit-dependent sectors as construction, despite extra subsidies
introduced, for instance, in Moscow (RBC Daily, October 10). Public indifference
to the looming recession takes pressure off the Kremlin in sending one “rescue
package” after another from the seemingly inexhaustible Central Bank reserves to
the agonizing financial market. The aggregate size of these measures, including
the latest decision to invest $7 billion from the Pension Fund in the stock
exchange, is twice as large as the Paulson Plan ( the so-called “bailout” for
the U.S. economy) in proportion to GDP, but there has hardly been any debate
about the aims and mechanisms (www.newsru.com, October 12).
That allows the Kremlin to target the funds to the “most favored” banks and
companies, for instance helping Gazprom and Rosneft to refinance their vast
external debts. The concept of “moral hazard” does not exist in the Russian
business vocabulary, and the crisis has become a pretext for enthusiastic
“privatization” of the accumulated reserves (Kommersant, October 8). In this
context, Medvedev’s homily in Evian on how the West should manage the
devastating and divisive crisis resonates rather oddly (www.gazeta.ru, October
8). His point on “the serious imbalance between the amount of financial
instruments issued and the real returns on investment programs” might leave
experts puzzled, but the proposition “to ensure maximum information transparency
and full disclosure for companies” invites questions about how applicable it is
to Gazprom. While Medvedev remained poignantly diplomatic in his
anti-Americanism, Putin drew a thick bottom line asserting that the confidence
in the United States as the “leader of the free world and free economy” had been
undermined forever (Interfax, October 9).
This bold assumption was elaborated by Medvedev into a strategic plan for
reconfiguring the European security system that is supposed to cure it from the
“unipolar syndrome” and correct the NATO-centric approach. In real terms, his
much-advertised initiative on a non-aggression pact amounts to little more than
rendering NATO irrelevant and dismantling the OSCE mechanisms, which have long
irritated Moscow, while Russia would forfeit “exclusive rights to maintaining
peace and stability in Europe.” Meeting with the eight CIS leaders in Bishkek
(the presidents of Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Ukraine were absent), Medvedev
revealed that Sarkozy had found his initiative interesting, and he emphasized
that his plan would raise the status of their Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) to a par with NATO. His counterparts, however, were more
concerned about the impact of the financial meltdown; and Kyrgyzstan, balancing
on the brink of collapse, pleaded desperately for aid and even indicated a
readiness to recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia (Nezavisimaya gazeta, October
10).
In Evian Medvedev argued at length that “this tragic page in the history of
the Caucasus has been turned now,” and he praised Sarkozy’s “bold and
responsible action” that had facilitated the peaceful solution. This praise
cannot hide the fact that Russia has no intention of implementing the key
provision in the six points of the Medvedev-Sarkozy plan concerning troop
withdrawal, since its new brigade-size military bases in Abkhazia and South
Ossetia directly violate the status quo ante. Nevertheless, Medvedev radiated
confidence that “the maturity of relations between Russia and EU” would help in
dismissing such minor disagreements.
Indeed, the magnitude of the unfolding economic cataclysm is such that the EU
has to prioritize its needs in Russian markets and financial resources, not to
mention natural gas, which could reach the shocking price of $500 to $600 per
1,000 cubic meters this winter before dropping in the spring. This cash flow,
however, would not compensate for the massive losses that Russia would sustain
due to the fall in oil prices and other commodities. These weeks might, in fact,
be the last moments in the long period of prosperity and cheap money that the
Russians have grown accustomed to taking for granted. Putin’s courtiers are busy
reaping the last rewards, suspecting that the social contract that granted
public consent for their monopoly on political power in exchange for the fast
growth of disposable income is about to end. The discovery that Russia is also
vulnerable to economic turmoil is not far away, and with it come questions about
the responsibility of the duumvirate for siphoning off the wealth. Kudrin may be
the pre-selected scapegoat, but the bucket does not stop even with Medvedev.
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