OPINION
Wonking Out: The Nightmare After Gorbachev
Sept. 2,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/02/opinion/russia-economy-mikhail-gorbachev.html
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
Most
articles on the death of Mikhail Gorbachev dwell on the political failure of his
reform project. The Russian Federation, the main successor state to the Soviet
Union, has not, to say the least, become a democratic, open society. Ukraine
may finally have gotten there, but that very success is probably one major
reason the country is now fighting for its life against Russian invasion.
What I’ve
been reading has placed less emphasis on the economic failures of
post-Gorbachev Russia. Yet those failures were spectacular and surely helped
pave the way for Putinism. So let’s talk about how badly things went wrong in
the 1990s.
First, some
background: Nowadays everyone views the old Soviet Union, with its centrally
planned economy, as an abject failure. But it didn’t always look that way.
Indeed, in the 1950s, and even into the 1960s, many people around the world saw
Soviet economic development as a success story; a backward nation had
transformed itself into a major world power. (Killing millions in the process,
but who’s counting?) As late as 1970, the Soviet Union’s success in converging
toward Western levels of wealth seemed second only to Japan’s.
Nor was
this a statistical mirage. If nothing else, Soviet performance during World War
II demonstrated that its industrial growth under Joseph Stalin had been very
real.
After 1970,
however, the Soviet growth story fell apart, and by some measures technological
progress came to a standstill.
Economic
stagnation may not fully explain the rise of Gorbachev. But the increasingly
obvious failure of centrally planned economics surely helped set the stage for
reform. The Soviet Union crumbled; Russia turned away from socialism and toward
a market economy.
And the
results were disastrous.
I don’t
know if it’s widely appreciated just how poorly the Russian economy performed
during the Boris Yeltsin years. But the numbers are sobering. Real gross
domestic product per capita fell more than 40 percent:
That’s
substantially worse than America’s decline during the worst of the Great
Depression:
In the
early 1990s, Russia also suffered from extreme inflation, reaching a peak of
more than 2,000 percent at an annual rate. No, I didn’t accidentally add extra
zeros:
I’ve seen
some suggestions that the economic plunge in Russia and other formerly planned
economies wasn’t as bad as the numbers say, because statistics from the
Communist era, when the economy may have been producing a lot of stuff nobody
actually wanted, may have inflated the true level of output. But there’s plenty
of other evidence for a collapse in living standards. Among other things, there
was a plunge in life expectancy:
Nor can we
say that these short-run costs were an inevitable consequence of the transition
from socialism to capitalism. As a 2001 I.M.F. paper pointed out, Russia’s
performance after liberalization was far worse than that of other “transition”
economies:
So what
went wrong? There were intense debates about that issue in the late 1990s and
early 2000s, which as far as I can tell never reached a consensus; then
everyone moved on to other issues. But there were a few plausible stories, not
mutually exclusive. They include the following:
At first,
Russia only moved partially to a market economy, and the partial privatization
wasn’t systematic. The result was an awkward mix of government and private
enterprise that was the worst of both worlds.
Where it
did privatize, Russia did so without the institutions — things like security
regulation, rules against predatory behavior and general rule of law — a market
economy needs to function.
Haphazard
privatization created a proliferation of monopolies, whose efforts to extract
as much as possible from everyone else turned them into the modern equivalent
of robber barons — the old barons, not Gilded Age industrialists — who hobbled
commerce across the board.
Chaotic
privatization also created a class of oligarchs, men with vast, unearned
wealth. “Property is theft!” declared the anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon;
well, in Yeltsin’s Russia, much of it really was. And the power of the
oligarchs surely distorted economic policy.
How much
did each of these factors contribute to the post-Gorbachev economic disaster? I
don’t know, and suspect few, if any, other people do either. But Russia in the
1990s clearly offers an object lesson in how not to transition to a market
economy.
The
problems of the 1990s culminated in a financial crisis in 1998. After that, the
Russian economy finally stabilized and resumed growth; unfortunately, it did so
under the leadership of a guy named Vladimir Putin. It’s doubtful whether
economic recovery required the fall of democracy, but that’s how it worked out.
This story
may not be over. (Are such stories ever over?) I hope, of course, that Ukraine
will defeat this invasion; if it does, one large part of the former Soviet
Union may finally have achieved a durable democracy. And it’s possible to imagine
a democratic Ukraine growing increasingly integrated with the European economy,
showing a way to combine democracy with prosperity.
But that’s
for the future. The sad historical truth is that Gorbachev’s political legacy
was, to an important degree, poisoned by Russia’s economic failure.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a distinguished
professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman


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