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#14
Date: Fri, 28 Dec 2001
From: "Peter Signorelli" <psignorelli@polyconomics.com>
Subject: POLYCONOMICS` MAN OF THE YEAR: VLADIMIR PUTIN
Peter Signorelli has sent you this plain text report from Polyconomics.com (http://polyconomics.com).
The fully formatted report may be found at http://polyconomics.com/showarticle.asp?articleid=1795
POLYCONOMICS` MAN OF THE YEAR: VLADIMIR PUTIN
To: Website Fans, Browsers, Clients
From: Polyconomics` Editors
Re: Russia`s President
For the past ten years, the senior Polyconomics staff has selected a
"Man of the Year," with criteria heavily influenced by his
contributions to the political economy.
Our choice for 2001 is Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, President of Russia, not
only for his positive contributions to Russia`s national economy during the past
year, but also for his leadership and creativity in the new global political
economy.
Mr. Putin`s remarkable accomplishments in Russia alone would have been enough
to make our list of nominees for Man of the Year. Until he arrived at the helm,
Russia was a shell of the once mighty nation that not long ago seriously
challenged the United States for pre-eminence in world leadership but which
had been reduced to extreme poverty of social, economic and spiritual life, to
despair, impotence and irrelevance. Russia inherited myriad problems from 70
years of Communism and the post-Communist decade of highly destructive
"shock therapy" that essentially burned down the old structure of the
state before a new one had been started.
With his election as president, Mr. Putin confidently embarked on a series of
supply-side economic reforms that have enabled Russians for the first time in
post-Communist history to see their living standards rise instead of decline --
even during the pronounced slowdown of much of the world`s economy. Much of this
flows from his confidence in undertaking dramatic policy measures that would
have horrified the bureaucrats of the International Monetary Fund -- those who
advised the governments of Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin into oppressive
tax regimes and currency devaluations. Among his initiatives were the especially
impressive range of supply-side tax reforms -- a 13% flat rate personal income
tax and 23% corporate tax, and the most serious moves yet toward the private
ownership of land. In 2001, Russia`s economy grew a robust 5.5%, as much of the
world languished in economic recession, and the Russian stock market, an
indicator of forward growth, surged from a low this year of 131 to more 254
points in dollar terms (1437.50 to 2884.21 in ruble terms)! There are still a
number of serious tasks remaining in this great transformation, Russia`s
reliance on a crawling peg as a guide to monetary policy an issue of worrisome
concern. Yet a singularly important indication of the great turnaround underway
now in Russia is that once again the people are proud to be Russian, with public
opinion polls showing that a majority of the country now looks to the future
with confidence.
These accomplishments by themselves might not have been sufficient as
decisive criteria for being chosen as Man of the Year. What elevates President
Putin to this singular status is that no other world political leader is doing
more to shape a positive direction for the post-Cold War era than he. His
ability to think outside the box, to redefine the conceptual framework of the
so-called New World Order, to move the world`s family of nations into new,
positive relationships among one another has made Russia a critical and
essential player in this regard. Under Putin`s leadership, Russia is becoming a
major force for global stability.
Perhaps his mastery of the art of judo plays a role in his approach to
strategic questions, as President Putin displays an ability to take the most
hostile, belligerent and threatening provocations thrown with great force
against Russia and to turn them around to produce a result that lessens global
instability and disarms the old Cold War-era strategists in the U.S. Those
strategists -- ever convinced that Russia (with sometimes China and Islam
included) remains the most dire threat to the "West" -- have devised
one strategy after another to isolate Russia and to cast it as a permanent
strategic adversary. Pres. Putin has taken on that offensive and effectively
routed it. Rather than react with hostility and belligerence, Mr. Putin used
diplomacy instead of force to turn around attempts to "contain" and
isolate Moscow via extension of NATO right up to Russia`s borders. Now some West
European leaders are even raising the prospect of Russian entry into the
Alliance.
Russia, once the great fear of Western Europe, is now increasingly welcome
with open arms across the continent. Germany, for example, shows new
appreciation of Russia as a moderating force for peace, as does more and more of
Europe. His vision of a united, prosperous and peaceful Europe presented in his
address to the German legislature -- delivered "in the language of
Friedrich Schiller and Johann Goethe" as he put it -- received
overwhelmingly positive responses. President George W. Bush of the U.S. very
easily could be engaged now in an expansion of U.S. military power and might
into Iraq, for example. The U.S. might take note of European -- and Indian, and
Chinese, and Arab, and Muslim -- opposition to such an extension of the
Superpower`s hegemony. Cheered on by Prime Minister Tony Blair of the U.K. and
the Cold Warrior strategists in and around the Bush administration, though,
Washington might be tempted to dismiss their complaints and attempt to remake
the world in its own image, without much thought to unintended consequences. By
adding his quiet charm and diplomatic skills to those in the Bush Cabinet who
counsel restraint, Putin has thus far channeled a globally destabilizing impulse
into one that points toward peaceful solutions.
While differences on strategic issues remain, Russian views are given a
serious hearing now with this U.S. administration. Rather than allowing U.S.
abrogation of the ABM Treaty to worsen U.S./Russian relations, Putin registered
his "disappointment" with the decision, but has gone on to persuade
many West European leaders of the efficacy of the Russian proposals (cast as a
European-wide perspective). This also has helped avert an adversarial reaction
by China to the U.S. move. Pres. Putin has his equivalents in Russia of the U.S.
bomber factions, yet he has managed very successfully to advance against their
opposition toward closer relations with the West and the U.S. in particular.
Russia`s relations with China, Iran, Western Europe, the Confederation of
Independent States and former Soviet satellites, as well as the U.S., range from
excellent to very good. Just appreciate for a minute that U.S. (as well as
French and British) armed forces are being stationed at military bases within
the Confederation of Independent States with the approval and encouragement of
Moscow. Revolutionary!!
The U.S. role as THE global superpower is unique, fraught with threatening
pitfalls, the danger of reckless hubris, and potential for a new era of
conflict. What a blessing that Vladimir Putin emerged particularly on the global
stage at this time to help temper, guide and inform this development in a way
that points toward an era of peace and prosperity. What an even greater blessing
that Mr. Putin realizes what a world-historic role he is called upon to play in
these times and does not shirk from it. We know he has read the works of
Schiller and Goethe, and thus appreciates the fact that anything great or
worthwhile in life whether it be in the realm of art, love, or human vision
comes about only through willingness to take great risks. That certainly is
the mark of leadership. President Vladimir Putin seems to have internalized the
wisdom imparted by those great minds. He acts as Schiller advised in his work,
Don Juan: Let each of your acts be your last battle on earth. Only under those
conditions will your acts have their rightful power. Otherwise, they will be for
as long as you live the acts of a timid man. I want to convince you that you
must learn to make every act count, since you are going to be here only for a
short while, in fact, too short for witnessing all the marvels of it.As Goethe
proclaimed: "Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough;
we must do." ***
Remarkably, here is a national leader who recently went on live television to
engage in a nationwide (across 11 time zones!) two-and-a-half hour phone-in,
giving unprecedentedly frank and honest answers to callers. Total calls into the
stations numbered in the hundreds of thousands, and in many cases he asked
callers to leave numbers so that he could get back to them to help resolve
problems. We provide here a link to the Russian text of the phone-in http://www.ortrtr.ru/.
All contents (c) 2000-2001 Polyconomics, Inc
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