Putin gambles Russia’s economy over Ukraine
Moscow’s geopolitical ambitions are trumping economic
concerns as Russians tighten their belts.
If anything, the Kremlin’s rhetoric suggests it is
willing to sacrifice the economy at the altar of Putin’s ambition to redraw the
security infrastructure that has been in place since the end of the Cold War
BY EVA
HARTOG
January 29,
2022 7:06 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-gamble-russia-economy-ukraine/
MOSCOW —
War jitters are rattling the Russian economy. The stock market is at risk of
tumbling, dragging the ruble down with it.
And that’s
on top of spiking prices and wages that won’t budge.
None of it
has stopped Russian President Vladimir Putin, though. Moscow has been preparing
for this.
If
anything, the Kremlin’s rhetoric suggests it is willing to sacrifice the
economy at the altar of Putin’s ambition to redraw the security infrastructure
that has been in place since the end of the Cold War, massing troops on
Ukraine’s border and risking war along the way.
There are
reasons that calculus might be sound — at least for the moment. Despite years
of sanctions and a pandemic, Russia’s economy is better equipped than many to
survive a crisis — even if it is a self-manufactured one. Meanwhile, there is
little Putin has to fear at home. Political opposition has been cowered and
forced into near silence, even as average Russians bemoan their vanishing
paychecks.
“Foreign
policy is more important to Putin than economic consequences,” Sergei Guriev, a
former chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
who is now a professor at Sciences Po, told POLITICO.
“In
democracies, such decisions have a political price,” he added. “In Russia,
Putin is not afraid of public dissatisfaction. The opposition has been quashed,
and he thinks that propaganda and censorship will keep people from knowing how
bad things are.”
Russia has
been here before.
After the
country annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, the West slapped Russia with
sanctions, sending the ruble into a nosedive. Compounded by more sanctions over
election meddling, fluctuating oil prices and a pandemic, the ruble never
recovered.
The fallout
challenged Putin’s long-standing pitch to Russians: better living conditions
even if political liberties are being slashed.
He offered
them something else instead: a dream of a resurgent Russian empire.
“Putin
started to believe in his historical mission, that Russians are in debt to him
and should delegate all responsibility,” said Tatiana Stanovaya, founder of the
consultancy R.Politik. “In Putin’s mind, if he goes to war with Ukraine, it is
his personal affair and a matter of Russia’s survival.”
Putin
conveyed this bellicose narrative on Wednesday, following a conspicuous
weeks-long silence on the Ukraine crisis during a video conference with Russian
athletes on their way to the Winter Olympics in Beijing.
“Russians
are not afraid of difficulties,” he said. “They always make us stronger, more
united and confident.”
Putin has
reason to be confident. Russia has become more prepared financially than it was
in 2014 for outside economic blows, perhaps adding to the leadership’s
confidence that it can weather the next storm.
“Oil prices
are high and Russia’s macroeconomic situation has no big problems; the budget
is balanced,” said Guriev, the former economist.
Additionally,
Russia has a sovereign wealth fund of almost $200 billion, which it could tap
into to help stabilize the economy.
“There is
inflation, but it should be noted Russia has a huge advantage over many other
countries: If it raises interest rates it won’t have problems paying off its
sovereign debt,” Guriev said.
The daily
reality for most Russian households, however, is less rosy.
For almost
a decade, real incomes have stagnated. Some of the pain has been numbed by
increased borrowing — but the cracks are showing.
“When will
our pay be indexed? When will I be able to buy a television, not with a loan,
but using cash?” a young woman said on TikTok in an emotional, profanity-laced
post circulating on social media. “Soon I’ll have to take out a loan just to
buy bread, because my salary evaporates the day it appears on my bank account.”
In an
independent poll, more than 40 percent of respondents described Russia’s
economic situation as “bad” or “very bad.” Since the start of the year, media
and social media have been swamped with price comparisons.
The general
conclusion: For many Russians, personal inflation is much higher than the
official rate of 8 percent that Finance Minister Anton Siluanov announced late
last year.
Always on
message, even from his prison cell, leading opposition figure Alexei Navalny
contributed his two cents.
In the
prison store where he is taken twice a month, “I look at the counter with the
same desperate horror that any pensioner on their shopping round is feeling
too,” a post on his Instagram account read. “First the canned stewed meat
became a luxury, having risen in price from 140 rubles to 250 (79 percent). I
haven’t bought it for a long time and I assure you that a pensioner will be
able to eat potatoes and stew once a month at most.”
Cheese, he
added, is becoming “the food of oligarchs.”
So even if
the current standoff does not result in a costly war with Ukraine, the
volatility is already putting a strain on the Russian economy.
And new,
harsher sanctions, which could involve cutting Russia off from the SWIFT international
financial payment system and targeting its banks, would present the country
with an unprecedented challenge.
Even with
the buffers in place, “it will still be very unpleasant and it will cause the
ruble to fall,” said Guriev, a staunch Navalny supporter. “This is something
that the Russian population will feel all too well.”
And for
what, many Russians will be asking themselves?
In contrast
to the annexation of Crimea in 2014, which a majority of Russians supported,
polls do not show enthusiasm for outright conflict with Ukraine. And yet there
is little to no public questioning of the Kremlin line.
After a
particularly repressive year in 2021, Russia’s opposition has been decimated.
Other than the odd social media post, there is little Navalny can do from jail.
His entire network has been branded as extremist, while other critics,
including journalists, have been tagged as “foreign agents.”
Any civic
activity is treacherous ground. Earlier this month, organizers of a protest
against price rises in Tuva, a region bordering Mongolia that consistently
ranks the poorest in Russia, received a warning for “extremism.”
As a
result, even among those who do not trust the state media narrative of Ukraine
as a puppet state and NATO as the aggressor, political apathy reigns.
“There is
little awareness of the situation,” said Greg Yudin, a sociologist. “People, in
general, are trying to steer clear from this topic.”
This has
allowed the impression to persist that Russia’s military adventurism comes for
free.
Viktoria, a
thirty-something hairdresser in Moscow, confessed she had not heard of the
threat of war.
“You have
to grant it to Putin that he manages to protect his citizens from whatever
happens on the global stage,” she said.
Like many
Russians, she did not think it would come to war. But if it does, she felt she
did not have the right to criticize Moscow, “the hand that feeds me.”
For a long
time, that seems to have guided the thinking of Russia’s elites, too, who have
amassed huge wealth under Putin’s patronage.
Now their
loyalty will be tested as they watch their assets held hostage to their president’s
geopolitical ambition.
“Technocrats
and the business elite are shocked and desperate. But they have been deprived
of the right to even mention any geopolitical concerns, let alone have a
dialogue, at risk of being suspected of being disloyal or not patriotic,” said
Stanovaya, of R.Politik.
“The best
strategy is to be silent, invisible, and adapt to whatever happens.”
Only one
group stands to gain from the current standoff: the hawkish siloviki, Putin’s
allies in the military and security services. “If Russia sees a new wave of
confrontation, their influence will grow,” Stanovaya said.
The
information they will be relaying to the Russian president is simple: It is not
a matter of if, but when, Russia will be hit with draconian sanctions for one
reason or another.
“So it
would be better if Russia does what it wants regarding its foreign policy
without losing time,” Stanovaya said. “And prepares for the hard times —
whatever the price.”
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