#24 - JRL 2008-81 - JRL Home
Moscow News
http://www.mnweekly.ru/
April 24, 2008
Cold Compress for the Russian Economy
By Marina Pustilnik
Everybody seems to agree these days - the Russian economy has been overheated
and needs a serious application of some sort of a cold compress. If nothing is
done, we run the danger of once again running into double-digit inflation this
year, while the economic situation is characterized by the imbalance between the
growth of labor productivity and labor costs and a widening gap between domestic
supply and demand.
The consumer credit frenzy shows no sign of diminishing - as a result, the
wait time to a buy foreign car has increased by 6-7 months, while the price of
apartments in the Moscow suburbs can jump as much as $20,000 in a matter of two
weeks. The ruble is getting stronger by the day, but its buying power does not
seem to be growing, as inflation is eating up all of the advances. Just a year
ago an apartment rent of 40,000 rubles seemed like something completely
unaffordable. Today it can be considered a good price - not because the incomes
have grown dramatically, but because inflation has changed people's attitude
towards money.
It is not that the government is not doing anything. The Economy and Finance
Ministries as well as the Central Bank have been unsuccessfully fighting
inflation for years. The key word here is "unsuccessfully."
The most recent example is the liquidity crisis, which threatened the
country's banking system after the banks gave out too much unsecured consumer
credit financed with the money they got from cheap capital markets in the West.
After the West was hit by the tide of the U.S. mortgage market crisis, rumors of
an impending downfall of the Russian banking system abounded. To fight the
liquidity crisis the Central Bank and the Finance Ministry pumped the federal
budget money and funds of the state corporations into a number of large banks -
only to provoke a new leap of inflation. Price freezes that were proposed and
implemented by the Economy Ministry at the end of last year did little to help.
This week, the Russian Federation Council hosted a roundtable discussion
about the overheated economy and methods of fighting this economic evil. The
ideas that gathered the most approval can be described as, well, "anti-market."
Sergei Glazyev suggested freezing the tariffs of natural monopolies for a period
of three or four years. Participants then went on to suggest other prices be
frozen as well. There was even talk of reinstating the State Price Committee and
the State Supplies Committee, but this is so "back to the USSR," that it will
definitely have to wait, at least as long as the Finance and Economy Ministries
are staffed by liberal economists.
The said economists believe that one of the main culprits of this overheating
is excessive budget spending. I see the reasoning behind that, but at the same
time I cannot shake the idea that the government could and should spend money -
on building infrastructure and financing other such long-term projects, which
are extremely important for the long-term viability of the country's economy. In
doing so, the state would bring the money to Russia's regions that have not felt
any effects of this overheating and create real jobs for people.
I am much more likely to blame the Russian banks that concentrated their
efforts on high-margin consumer credit instead of giving lower-margin business
credit that could help the country's small and medium-sized business grow,
closing the gap between supply and demand of goods.
From this point of view, the Economy Ministry's suggestion for fighting the
heat by stimulating people to save up (in the banks) strikes a more positive
chord. But, unfortunately, such measures depend on so many "ifs" that their
success remains doubtful. Freezing an overheated economy demands some unpopular
measures. We'll see if Russia has a government capable of taking unpopular
measures after inauguration of the new President. But I'm guessing that the
summer will be very hot, and not just because of the weather.
|