Paul Craig Roberts and Michael Hudson: “Russian government is
reconsidering the neoliberal policy”
August 11, 2016
Thesaker.is
by Paul
Craig Roberts and Michael Hudson
According to
various reports, the Russian government is reconsidering the neoliberal policy
that has served Russia so badly since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
If Russia had adopted an intelligent economic policy, its economy would be far
ahead of where it stands today. It would have avoided most of the capital
flight to the West by relying on self-finance.
Washington took
advantage of a demoralized Russian government, which looked to Washington for
guidance in the post-Soviet era. Thinking that the rivalry between the
two countries had ended with the Soviet collapse, Russians trusted American advice
to modernize its economy with best-practice Western ideas. Instead, Washington
abused this trust, and saddled Russia with an economic policy designed to carve
up Russian economic assets and transfer ownership into foreign hands. By
tricking Russia into accepting foreign capital and exposing the ruble to
currency speculation, Washington made sure that the US could destabilize Russia
with capital outflows and assaults on the ruble’s exchange value. Only a
government unfamiliar with the neoconservative aim of US world hegemony would
have exposed its economic system to such foreign manipulation.
The sanctions that
Washington imposed – and forced Europe to impose – on Russia show how
neoliberal economics works against Russia. Its call for high interest rates and
austerity sank the Russian economy – needlessly. The ruble was knocked
down by capital outflows, resulting in the neoliberal central bank squandering
Russia’s foreign reserves in an effort to support the ruble but actually
supported capital flight.
Even Vladimir Putin
finds attractive the romantic notion of a global economy to which every country
has equal access. But the problems resulting from neoliberal policy forced him
to turn to import substitution in order to make the Russian economy less dependent
on imports. It also made Putin realize that if Russia were to have one
foot in the Western economic order, it needed to have the other foot in the new
economic order being constructed with China, India, and former central Asian
Soviet republics.
Neoliberal
economics prescribes a dependency policy that relies on foreign loans and
foreign investment. This policy creates foreign currency debt and foreign
ownership of Russian profits. These are dangerous vulnerabilities for a
nation declared by Washington to be “an existential threat to the US.”
The economic
establishment that Washington set up for Russia is neoliberal. Most notably,
the head of the central bank Elvira Nabiullina, minister of economic
development Alexei Ulyukayev, and the current and former finance ministers,
Anton Siluanov and Alexei Kudrin, are doctrinaire neoliberals. This crowd
wanted to deal with Russia’s budget deficit by selling public assets to
foreigners. If actually carried through, that policy would give Washington more
control over Russia’s economy.
Opposed to this
collection of “junk economists,” stands Sergey Glaziev. Boris Titov and
Andrei Klepach are reported to be his allies.
This group
understands that neoliberal policies make Russia’s economy susceptible to
destabilization by Washington if the US wants to punish the Russian government
for not following Washington’s foreign policy. Their aim is to promote a
more self-sufficient Russia in order to protect the nation’s sovereignty and
the government’s ability to act in Russia’s national interests rather than
subjugate these interests to those of Washington. The neoliberal model is not a
development model, but is purely extractive. Americans have characterized it as
making Russia or other dependencies “hewers of wood and drawers of water” – or
in Russia’s case, oil, gas, platinum and diamonds.
Self-sufficiency
means not being import dependent or dependent on foreign capital for investment
that could be financed by Russia’s central bank. It also means keeping
strategic parts of the economy in public, not private, hands. Basic
infrastructure services should be provided to the economy at cost, on a
subsidized basis or freely, not turned over to foreign owners to extract
monopoly rent. Glaziev also wants the ruble’s exchange value to be set by
the central bank, not by speculators in the currency market.
Neoliberal
economists do not acknowledge that the economic development of a nation with
natural resource endowments such as Russia has can be financed by the central
bank creating the money required to undertake the projects. They pretend
that this would be inflationary. Neoliberals deny the long-recognized
fact that, in terms of the quantity of money, it makes no difference whether
the money comes from the central bank or from private banks creating money
by making loans or from abroad. The difference is that if money comes
from private banks or from abroad, interest must be paid to the banks, and
profits have to be shared with foreign investors, who end up with some control
over the economy.
Apparently,
Russia’s neoliberals are insensitive to the threat that Washington and its
European vassals pose to the Russian state. On the basis of lies Washington has
imposed economic sanctions on Russia. This political demonization is as
fictitious as is the neoliberal economic propaganda. On the basis of such
lies, Washington is building up military forces and missile bases on Russia’s
borders and in Russian waters. Washington seeks to overthrow former
Russian or Soviet provinces and install regimes hostile to Russia, as in
Ukraine and Georgia. Russia is continually demonized by Washington and
NATO. Washington even politicized the Olympic games and prevented the
participation of many Russian athletes.
Despite these overt
hostile moves against Russia, Russian neoliberals still believe that the
economic policies that Washington urges on Russia are in Russia’s interest, not
intended to gain control of its economy. Hooking Russia’s fate to Western
hegemony under these conditions would doom Russian sovereignty.
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