By Carol J. Williams
April 6, 2014
As oil exports soared,
the Kremlin put its resources into showy projects that won't generate much
revenue, analysts say. Already, growth has flat-lined.
MOSCOW — It can take
Moscow residents two hours in dense traffic to drive the first 10 miles on the
highway to St. Petersburg, in the direction of their country cottages
surrounded by lakes and birch groves. Then the road's real limitations become
apparent.
The potholed two-lane
route connecting Russia's two largest cities has never been upgraded into a
proper highway. Anyone who cares to drive its entire 440-mile length — mostly
truckers — will need at least 12 hours.
But 5,600 miles away,
the government spent more than $1 billion on less than a mile of bridge
connecting Vladivostok with Russky Island, previously inhabited only by a
military garrison so isolated that four soldiers starved to death in 1992. An
additional $5 billion was lavished on the speck of land to host the 2012
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, including a new university campus and
an as-yet-unfinished presidential residence.
Visions of a North
Pacific tourist destination have proved illusory, however. Few people care to
vacation in a place where the temperature is below freezing half the year.
Such spending priorities
reflect President Vladimir Putin's effort to project power and
engineering prowess through the showy style of today's Kremlin.
Massive oil and gas
profits allow the leadership to finance pet projects, many of which benefit
those in Putin's inner circle but contribute little to the general welfare.
They suck up money needed for modern highways, regional airports, hospitals,
courthouses and other infrastructure, analysts say.
State-owned factories
still dominate production. Bureaucracy stunts the small businesses that are the
engine of growth elsewhere. Private wealth generated in Russia is often
spirited abroad, to countries where banking and investment are more
trustworthy. Efforts initiated by former President Dmitry Medvedev to streamline the economy
have sputtered since Putin engineered his return to the top job two years ago
and shifted the focus to enhancing state control and ensuring public order.
As economic growth has
flat-lined over the last six months, a sense of unease has emerged, even among
state economic advisors who see more risk to stability from an economic crisis than a political one. Putin's
seizure of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine, causing a sharp deterioration in
relations with the West, is likely to make matters worse.
Some megaprojects like
the 2014 Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, which cost more than $50 billion to
host, were from the outset matters of prestige that few expected to turn a
profit. A city of about 400,000, Sochi now has stadium seating for 200,000,
four new ski resorts connected by rail, 50,000 hotel rooms and a seaport that
can accommodate 300 yachts.
More broadly, critics
say Russia has proved itself vulnerable to the "oil sickness" —
letting short-term affluence erode any sense of urgency for reform.
"It's like casino
money. If you lose it, it's no big deal, because you didn't have to work hard
to get it," said Vladimir Milov, founding director of the Institute for
Energy Policy in Moscow and a former deputy energy minister during Putin's
first presidential term. "The majority of the government's investments go
into projects that don't generate further economic activity."
Russia earns as much as
80% of its state budget revenue through commodity sales and the services they
underwrite.
Oil and oil-related
exports have soared over the last decade, from $50 billion a year to $390
billion, said Ivan Grachev, the State Duma lawmaker chairing the Energy
Committee. But GDP growth has dropped to near zero from the double-digit boom
of the 1990s, and the Finance Ministry acknowledged late last year that
provincial governments' budgets were $70 billion in the red.
Grachev disputed
arguments of other politicians that a rising tide of oil revenue lifts all
economic sectors. Major energy companies like Gazprom and Rosneft, in which the
state is majority shareholder, spend only about 1% of their income on research
and development that can create associated industries and jobs.
In a recent article for
the Russia & India Report, Grachev argued for tax breaks and investment
incentives to make Russia a world leader in applied mathematics, aerospace and
biotechnology.
Russia ranked 28th of 58
countries in an index meant to evaluate how effectively resource-rich countries
use profits for the public good, in the company of countries such as Iran,
Libya, Turkmenistan and Zimbabwe. The analysis, by the Revenue Watch Institute
created by the nonprofit Open Society fund, scored Russia's resource management
at 56 out of 100 points, reflecting concern about its lack of transparency and
rampant corruption.
Russia earned praise for
establishing a Natural Resources Fund in 2004 in which all profit from
petroleum trade above 3.7% of GDP was to be set aside for future development
needs. But in 2010, the institute reported, the government suspended most
public disclosures of the fund's finances, citing emergency powers needed to
cover budget shortfalls during the global recession.
Leonid Grigoriev, a
professor of economics and senior strategist at the Russian Federation Analytical
Center, said government economists are no less concerned about Russia's
resource dependence than their private counterparts.
"We all hate this
dependency on oil and gas, but the Soviets built this system and we inherited
it," said Grigoriev, who has parsed Russian finances from the time of
Communist Party leader Leonid Brezhnev.
Russia's ability to
diversify is hampered, he said, by severe weather and huge distances that
separate major cities from resource-rich areas where new industries could be
developed. Sixty percent of Russian territory is permafrost, he said.
Los
Angeles Times
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