The Borneo Post

Even after lost decade, Putin isn’t ready to fix economy

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WITH Russia mired in what turned out to be the longest recession in two decades, Vladimir Putin won plaudits from investors last year by tasking former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin with drafting an economic programme for 2018 to 2024, which happens to be the next presidenti­al term.

Kudrin, who is widely credited with achieving record results in the first half of the Putin era, submitted his plan Tuesday, just before the president’s annual pitch to investors in St. Petersburg, where both men got their start in politics.

The new blueprint contains many of Kudrin’s old recipes for reviving growth, such as cutting the state’s role in the economy, curbing the government’s addiction to oil, investing in education, modernisin­g infrastruc­ture and improving ties with the West to boost access to technology and stimulate trade.

But while policies addressing many of these issues have succeeded before, the chances of Putin adopting Kudrin’s entire package appear remote. The reason, analysts said, is that such measures would eat away at the Kremlin- centric model that Putin built back when the price of crude was double what it is now. That system rewards people closest to power, creating a network of increasing­ly wealthy supporters resistant to change.

Speaking at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum Thursday, Kudrin said he’s confident that “no less than 70 per cent of his programme will be adopted.”

But “a lost decade” is how the outspoken economist characteri­sed the last 10 years, when growth averaged just over one per cent a year, a fraction of the almost seven per cent reached during Putin’s first two terms. “Russia, catastroph­ically, is losing time,” Kudrin said. “Unfortunat­ely, authoritie­s are only slowly understand­ing that structural changes are necessary.”

While Putin has long embraced many of Kudrin’s goals publicly, the Kremlin’s actions tell a different story. State companies have only become bigger in the 17 years since Putin came to power and crude remains the lifeblood of the economy. Detente with the US and European Union remains a remote prospect.

While Putin hasn’t announced his intention to run for what constituti­onally would be a final, six-year term, he’s already preparing for a campaign that is widely expected to meet little resistance. Kudrin said he’s hopeful the man he’s worked with since their days in the St. Petersburg mayor’s office in the 1990s will adopt a less cautious approach in the new term.

But so far the signs aren’t good. After receiving Kudrin’s plan, Putin ordered his longtime adviser to work with a pro-business group to merge the two sometimes contradict­ory programmes.

A separate government proposal was also presented to Putin earlier in May. From that combined effort, the president’s staff will extract a final plan, according to Kudrin.

In his keynote speech at the St. Petersburg forum on Friday, Putin is expected to repeat his usual calls for opening up the economy and stimulatin­g growth. But even government insiders said there’s no sign the reform pledges will be any more likely to be implemente­d than previous calls to action, which rarely made it further than the vast conference hall where he holds court every year.

“There’s no reason to believe things will be different this time,” said Andrei Kolesnikov of the Moscow Carnegie Center. “All previous efforts at authoritar­ian modernisat­ion in Russia have failed and this one will too.”

The recent rebound in oil prices and recovery in Russia’s economy have further eroded whatever sense of urgency the Kremlin may have felt. After seven consecutiv­e quarters of

Russia, catastroph­ically, is losing time. Unfortunat­ely, authoritie­s are only slowly understand­ing that structural changes are necessary. Alexei Kudrin, former Finance Minister

contractio­n, growth resumed in the fourth quarter of 2016, though just 0.3 per cent.

Officials now expect two per cent growth for this year and a smaller budget deficit than first forecast.

And though western sanctions remain in place, the Finance Ministry has been able to sell Eurobonds via local banks and another sale is currently being prepared. Demand is expected to be strong as foreign investors slowly return, and economists say any additional easing of tensions with the US that might come from Donald Trump’s administra­tion would only speed that process.

But even the sustained, three per cent growth that Putin wants is barely enough to keep Russia from sliding further in the ranks of leading economies. That’s been one of Kudrin’s key arguments for reforms in his meetings with Putin over the last year, according to people familiar with the conversati­ons: Russia is falling behind, putting at risk the geopolitic­al heft Putin so values.

In the last two years, Russia has dropped off the list of the 10 largest countries by nominal gross domestic product and is now on par with Australia, which has just a sixth of the population, and South Korea, World Bank data show.

At the Kremlin session with Putin, Kudrin reiterated his argument that Russia is at “the end of the line” and must reform to achieve lasting growth.

But Putin said he hadn’t decided whether to accept Kudrin’s programme or pick and choose from it and others drafted by the government and Boris Titov, the Kremlin’s business ombudsmen. Kudrin and Titov say their programmes are incompatib­le, since the former minister’s is based on tight money and small deficits and the lobbyist’s calls for monetary and fiscal easing to spur growth.

“Plans for economic developmen­t must be clear and realistic,” Putin said.

Kudrin said no final deadline was set for the joint proposal, so some of the approved policies may be announced before the March election, while others may be included in a strategy document that will be released later.

Despite a sharp drop in incomes over the last few years, opinion polls show public support for Putin at a nearrecord. Anti-Kremlin protests in recent months have been limited, with wider political opposition muted by the security forces and the Kremlin’s monopoly on television.

“The authoritie­s won’t risk fundamenta­l changes now because there are too many people around Putin who have no interest in them,” said Yevgeny Yasin, a former economy minister and one of the driving forces behind Russia’s transition from communism to capitalism. “Reforms would deprive the ruling elites of all the privileges and benefits they currently enjoy.”

 ??  ?? Russian President Putin (right), Prime Minister Medvedev (centre) and Donskoi, Russia’s natural resources minister, visit an environmen­tal clean up operation on Alexandra Land Island in the Franz Josef Land archipelag­o, Russia, on Mar 29. —...
Russian President Putin (right), Prime Minister Medvedev (centre) and Donskoi, Russia’s natural resources minister, visit an environmen­tal clean up operation on Alexandra Land Island in the Franz Josef Land archipelag­o, Russia, on Mar 29. —...
 ??  ?? Former Russian finance minister Kudrin looks on during a panel session at the St. Petersburg Internatio­nal Economic Forum (SPIEF) in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on June 1.
Former Russian finance minister Kudrin looks on during a panel session at the St. Petersburg Internatio­nal Economic Forum (SPIEF) in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on June 1.

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