#15 - JRL 2008-198 - JRL Home
Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 5, Number 207
October 29, 2008
ECONOMIC “HAPPY TALK” FAILS TO SWAY DOUBTERS
By Jonas Bernstein
Following on the heels of two of Russia’s top economic officials, the
country’s top two leaders (readers can decide for themselves which is No. 1)
have made statements aimed at calming the fears of both ordinary Russians and
foreign investors.
With the ruble having lost 10 to 12 percent of its value since early August
(Associated Press, October 20), First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov and
Central Bank First Deputy Chairman Alexei Ulyukayev denied in interviews last
weekend that the ruble would experience “sharp fluctuations” in its value or be
“significantly devalued” (EDM, October 27).
On October 27 the website of the weekly newspaper Argumenty i fakty published
an article in which President Dmitry Medvedev answered a question from a reader
about what he had done with his ruble savings in response to the global
financial crisis. (Medvedev said on his official income declaration that he had
2,700,000 rubles, worth around $98,900, in bank accounts.) “I have kept all of
my accounts in the banks,” the newspaper quoted Medvedev as saying. “I have not
taken my money out, not changed rubles into dollars, and have not bought shares.
I am convinced that my savings, just like the money of the rest of Russia’s
depositors, are not under threat” (www.aif.ru, October 27).
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said on October 27 that Russia would
not respond to the international financial crisis with an isolationist policy.
“Under the conditions of the world financial crisis, simple solutions are very
enticing,” he told a Russian Cabinet meeting. “Naturally, we should take into
account the current realities, and we are doing so in our practical policy; but,
strategically, isolationism is not our choice at all.” In the face of such a
crisis, steps like “the closure of national economies, aggressive protectionism,
[and] restrictions on capital flow” are often given consideration, Putin said.
“We have a different choicefurther participation of Russia in the world
economy,” he said (Interfax, October 27).
Meanwhile, Russia’s battered stock market rose nearly 5 percent on October
28. Reuters quoted the chairman of Russia’s state Development Bank (VEB),
Vladimir Dmitriev, as saying that the rise was the result of the bank having
ploughed 20 billion rubles ($731.3 million) into the market since last week
(Reuters, October 28).
Despite the happy talk from Putin and Medvedev and the Russian stock market’s
positive response to large infusions of state funds, some observers continue to
paint a bleak picture of Russia’s economic future. “The global financial crisis
has robbed Russia of two things important for its prosperityhigh prices for oil
and foreign investment,” Novye izvestia wrote.
"It is officially acknowledged: Over the past three months, the net outflow
of capital from the Russian Federation was on the order of $50 billion dollars.
By way of comparison, during the first seven months of 2008, the net inflow of
capital totaled $30 billion, and for all of 2007, $83 billion. That money
supported not only the stock market, which is now sinking, but also the
development of the economy. Now [that money] is no more (Novye izvestia, October
29)."
Novye izvestia quoted Vladislav Inozemtsev, director of the Moscow-based
Center for Post-Industrial Studies, who contrasted the current situation to the
one that Russians faced in 1998, when the ruble collapsed and Russia defaulted.
“While the population back then accumulated money, and it was devalued, now
everything will be okay with savingsbank deposits are not being reduced to zero
and there will not be a devaluation of the rublebut, on the other hand, current
receipts will decrease because of layoffs and salary reductions,” he said.
Inozemtsev predicted that such indicators would start becoming noticeable in two
months, when the severance pay of those now losing their jobs ended and the
economic downturn also hit those who had been receiving income from renting
their apartments.
Inozemtsev also predicted that the economic downturn would have a noticeable
impact on wealthier Russians and the businesses that catered to them. “All the
glamour will disappearfrom television screens, from commercial signs, from
boutiques,” he said. “There won’t be money to pay for soccer teams, to buy
soccer players for 30 million euros, for expensive apartments, for country
houses, for expensive travel tours, merchandise, and elite shops.”
Likewise, Boris Kagarlitsky, director of the Institute of Globalization and
Social Movements, predicted that falling incomes would make Russians more
cautious consumers. “First and foremost, demand for expensive merchandise and
luxury items will drop, and the money will be shifted from these things to
day-to-day goods,” he said, adding that there were signs that this was already
happening. “Demand for housing, for automobiles, is dropping,” he said. “The
population has enough money for bread and butter, therefore demand for food
remains high.” According to the Institute of Globalization and Social Movements,
sales of consumer goods have dropped more than 20 percent since the spring, and
the warehouses of many industrial enterprises remain filled with unsold products
(Novye izvestia, October 29).
|