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#8 - JRL 8173 - JRL Home
VICE-PREMIER ZHUKOV SPEAKS ON RUSSIAN ECONOMIC
SITUATION AND OUTLOOK AT LONDON FORUM
LONDON, April 19 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Alexander
Zhukov believes that the transition stage will end in the Russian economy in the
next four years. "We now have a window for a transition to a fundamentally new
development stage, which can be completed in the next four or five years," the
vice-premier said Monday at the 7th Russian Economic Forum in London.
"It is time the Russian economy stopped being a transition economy," he said.
"I hope this tiresome adjective will disappear from references to Russia." In
his words, the task of the new stage of the reforms is the modernisation of
society, the state and the economy. For the state, it entails the reduction of
the bodies of power, with the remaining agencies working harder, and maximally
possible state aloofness of economic matters.
He reminded the forum participants that the number of federal ministries has
been slashed from 23 to 14 and the staff of federal bodies of power has been
reduced by 20%, while the salaries of officials have been increased by several
times. Enterprises that are not connected with state functions will continue to
be sold in Russia, Zhukov assured the audience. "We must also minimise the
subject opinion of officials in decision making and in this way erect a major
barrier to corruption," stressed the premier.
Talks on Russia's accession to the WTO have entered the final stage, said
Zhukov. "They may be finished in 2004." But the time factor is not crucial; the
main thing is to settle all disputed issues.
According to the vice-premier, in the past two years Russia has made serious
progress at the WTO talks with the EU, though issues pertaining to gas and power
engineering have not been settled yet. "The main problems of concern to Russia
have been solved, but mutual claims have not yet been raised in the sphere of
power engineering and gas," he said.
Investments in the Russian economy will grow to $140 billion by 2007.
"Investments have grown from $56 billion in 2002 to $94 billion in 2004 and are
expected to reach $140 billion by 2007," said the vice-premier. He is sure that
direct foreign investments will grow, too, thanks to the vast scale of the
Russian market and its unlimited raw materials potential.
The stabilisation fund will be set up within two years. "If prices of Urals
oil remain at $27-30 per barrel, a stabilisation fund of 500 million roubles [1
dollar is approximately 28.5 roubles] will be created by the end of 2005, and
the creation of the fund as we devised it will be completed within two years."
He recalled that it had been planned that the 500 billion roubles will be
accumulated in the fund within three years.
"In the next 4-5 years, the number of Russians who live below the poverty
line will be halved." At present, over 20% of the population (about 30 million)
have an income that is lower than the subsistence wage. By 2007, the government
expects to raise the real take-home incomes of the population to grow by 35-40%
on 2002, said Zhukov.
He pointed out that the government and the Central Bank of Russia intend to
restrain the excessive strengthening of the rouble. The rouble will grow by 7%
with regard to the currency basket and by 8% with regard to the dollar. "In
2005, the rouble/dollar rate will grow by 2% more." Inflation growth has been
slowing down in the past four years. This year, prices will not grow above 10%
and inflation is to be reduced to 4-6% by 2007. The reduction of inflation
should help limit the growth of prices of the services of natural monopolies,
whose contribution to inflation should not exceed 2-3%.
In 2005, electricity and railway transportation tariffs should not exceed the
overall inflation level and gas prices will not be allowed to grow by more than
20%.
The tax reform will end in 2005-2006. "The unified social tax and the value
added tax will be reduced" but this will not reduce budgetary revenues. "In the
past years, the reduction of the tax burden did hinder the growth of budgetary
revenues," said the vice-premier. "The reduction of taxes will give a new
impetus to the market economy and will eventually result in the growth of
budgetary revenues." According to the government, budgetary losses from the
reduction of the unified social tax in 2005 will be compensated by the
legalisation of wages and an increase of the tax burden on the oil industry.
"The structural redistribution of the tax burden will allow us to encourage
economic diversification." The vice-premier explained that investments would be
channelled into the processing industries.
Zhukov said the 2005 budget "will include a considerable part of end-result
financing elements and in a few years it will be fully based on the task setting
and end-result assessment." The redistribution of powers and budgetary functions
between the federal, regional and local authorities will be completed in
20025-2006. This will ensure the transition of the state to a fundamentally new
level of financing and fulfilling social obligations.
Replying to questions after the forum, Zhukov assured journalists that there
would be no de-privatisation or re-nationalisation in Russia. "The Russian
government will do its best to convince everyone that there would be no de-privatisation
or re-nationalisation," said the vice-premier.
According to him, the "Khodorkovsky case" did not seriously affect the
Russian economy. "There was a minor fall on the Russian market, but this is not
a reason to predict de-privatisation or re-nationalisation," he said. "I think
the investors can see this."
(Former Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky is in custody on charges of creating a
criminal group that used fraudulent schemes during the privatisation of Russian
enterprises.).
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