Putinomics: Power and Money in Resurgent Russia
By Chris Miller
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Chris Miller
Chris Miller is assistant professor of international history in the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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Putinomics - Chris Miller
PUTINOMICS
PUTINOMICS
POWER AND MONEY IN RESURGENT RUSSIA
CHRIS MILLER
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS
CHAPEL HILL
© 2018 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Designed and set in Arno by Rebecca Evans
The University of North Carolina Press has been a member of the Green Press Initiative since 2003.
Cover illustration: The front of a Russian 5,000-ruble banknote, 2010 version
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Miller, Chris, author.
Title: Putinomics : power and money in resurgent Russia / Chris Miller.
Description: Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, [2018] | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2017042863 | ISBN 9781469640662 (cloth : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781469640679 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Russia (Federation)—Economic policy—1991– | Russia (Federation)—Economic conditions—1991– | Russia (Federation)— Politics and government—1991– | Elite (Social sciences)—Russia (Federation) | Putin, Vladimir Vladimirovich, 1952– | Presidents—Russia (Federation)
Classification: LCCDK510.76 .M56 2018 | DDC 330.947—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017042863
TO LIYA
CONTENTS
Preface / The Strongman Economy?
Note on Transliteration
1 / Putin’s Economic Inheritance
2 / Reforging the Russian State
3 / Rise of the Energy Giants
4 / Stabilizing Russia’s Finances
5 / Restructuring Russian Industry
6 / Wages and Welfare
7 / From Crisis to Crisis
8 / Putinomics under Pressure
Postscript / Can Putinomics Survive?
Acknowledgments
Suggestions for Further Reading
Notes
Bibliography
Index
FIGURES AND TABLE
Figures
1 Russian government budget balance as percentage of GDP, 1992–2000 7
2 Russian oil production, 1992–2016 39
3 Russian oil and gas tax revenue as percentage of total government revenue, 1999–2014 40
4 Russian external sovereign debt as percentage of GDP, 1998–2007 63
5 Oil prices, 1999–2007 65
6 Russian consumer price inflation, 1995–2005 69
7 Actual oil prices vs. prices forecast in government budgets, 2000–2008 74
8 Russian government revenue and expenditure, 2016 106
9 Russian government pensions, percentage change per year, inflation-adjusted, 1994–2015 110
10 Russian wage growth, percentage change per year, inflation-adjusted, 1994–2015 112
11 Russian wage growth vs. labor productivity growth, 2000–2012 113
12 Russian military spending as percentage of GDP, 1992–2008 116
13 Russian military spending as percentage of GDP, 2005–2014 118
14 External (foreign) lending to Russian banks and corporations, 2004–2008 120
15 External lending to Russian banks, 2008–2009 122
16 Russian foreign exchange reserves and exchange rates, 2008–2009 127
17 Budget balance excluding oil and gas revenue as percentage of GDP, 2006–2014 135
18 Private capital inflows, 2005–2013 139
19 Foreign exchange reserves and exchange rates, January 2014–January 2016 150
20 Financial sector external (foreign) debt, 2013–2015 153
21 Quarterly private capital inflows, 2000–2007 159
22 Quarterly private capital inflows, 2013–2015 159
Table
1 Reported obstacles to Russian business, 2000 158
PREFACE / THE STRONGMAN ECONOMY?
There are two absolutely very well-known historical experiments in the world—East Germany and West Germany, and North Korea and South Korea. Now these are cases that everyone can see!
¹ So spoke Vladimir Putin, president of the Russian Federation, in an address to the Duma in 2012. As a former KGB operative in communist East Germany, Putin knew of what he spoke. Communism, he later explained, was a historic futility. Communism and the power of the Soviets did not make Russia a prosperous country.
Its main legacy was dooming our country to lagging steadily behind economically advanced countries. It was a blind alley, far away from the mainstream of world civilizations.
² Putin is not widely known as a critic of communist economics. The collapse of the Soviet Union, he famously declared, was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.
³ Whoever does not miss the Soviet Union has no heart,
Putin said on a different occasion. Less well known, he also warned: Whoever wants it back has no brain.
⁴
The Kremlin’s wars in Ukraine and Syria and its attempt to reconstruct the sphere of privileged interests
that Russia lost when the Soviet Union collapsed have only heightened the popular sense that Vladimir Putin and the Russian elite are dead set on building the Soviet empire anew. In economic terms, many people think, Russia’s failings since Putin came to power in 1999 mirror the dysfunctions of the Soviet economy. Ask a typical person their impressions of Russia’s economy and words such as corruption, kleptocracy, and petrostate come to mind.
These descriptions get much right. The policy failures and missed opportunities of the past two decades are plentiful. Whole books are devoted to exposing the corruption of Russia’s rulers—and indeed they are corrupt.⁵ One U.S. senator has described Russia as a gas station masquerading as a country
—and indeed, oil and gas play as large a role as ever.⁶ Other analysts call Russia a neo-KGB state
—and indeed, former spies and secret agents dominate not only the government but business, too.⁷ These critiques of contemporary Russia’s political economy are levied by foreigners and Russians alike, and not only by those Russians who support the opposition. The economic problems Russia faces are real, and many are self-inflicted.
Yet neo-Soviet it is not. Today, Russia’s state plays a large role in the economy, but unlike in the Soviet period, the Kremlin only dominates certain sectors, leaving others alone. Nor is the story solely of mistakes and failures: things could well have been worse. Indeed, from the perspective of 1999, when Putin came to power and began forging the centrally managed political system that governs the country today, Russia’s economic performance has exceeded most expectations. There was some optimism about the independent Russia that emerged from the wreckage of the USSR in 1991, but during the subsequent decade everything seemed to go wrong. The country’s agricultural sector sank into depression. Much of the consumer goods industry went bankrupt. Industry did relatively better only because it was sustained by government subsidies that fueled inflation, wiping out many Russians’ savings. By the end of the 1990s, the optimistic expectations that Russia would develop a new, capitalist middle class seemed, to most observers, naive. The most visible new class was that of the oligarchs, whose corrupt business dealings were the main news story of the 1990s.
By the time of the 1998 financial crash, when Russia defaulted on its debt and the ruble collapsed, foreign and domestic observers alike had downgraded their expectations of what Russia could achieve. In 1991, some analysts hoped Russia could become a normal European country. In 1999, the most optimistic interpretation was that Russia had become a normal emerging market.⁸ That was not a compliment. The news in 1999—the year that Putin took power—was depressing. In general, the Russian economy is a mess,
began one story in the Washington Post.⁹ Doubts Riddle Optimism of Young Russians,
reported USA Today.¹⁰ Looking on the bright side, a headline in Britain’s Independent noted, Russia is down but not out; her economy has shriveled but Russia still has a mountain of horrendous weapons.
¹¹ And that was the good news!
Perhaps the post-1998 gloom was unduly negative, unrepresentative of what realistically should have been expected from Russia? Perhaps a better metric would be to find a country that looked like Russia in 1999 and compare its development. A middle-income country. A country in which oil rents constituted at least 10–15 percent of GDP and all natural resource rents constituted around 20 percent of total output.¹² A country in which a young lieutenant colonel took power in 1999, committed to using the security services to bolster his power. A president who claimed the mantle of democratic legitimacy in part based on his ability to force big business and oligarchs to follow his rules, whether by means fair or foul.
One need not invent a country that in 1999 looked so like Russia. It exists in Chavista Venezuela: still governed by an autocratic regime, still dependent on declining oil revenues, still failing to build an economy based on rules rather than political whim. The difference is that the Chavistas spent recklessly during the oil boom while presiding over a mismanagement-induced collapse in oil production and, now, painful shortages of consumer goods created by poorly conceived price controls.¹³ According to World Bank estimates, Venezuela was wealthier on a per person basis than Russia in 1999. No longer.¹⁴
Surely no one could have reasonably expected Russia to turn out like Venezuela today? In fact, in 1999, some observers thought Venezuela was better placed to prosper. At the time, credit rating agencies judged it safer to lend to Venezuela’s government than to Russia’s.¹⁵ The economic problems we currently associate with Venezuela—consumer good shortages, runaway inflation, and military-enforced food requisitions—were the story of Russia’s twentieth century. There was little reason in 1999 to think that this sorry history would not persist into the twenty-first century. Today few people compare Russia and Venezuela. That is because the two countries’ lieutenant colonels had very different methods. The Chavista experiment is widely recognized as a failure, but under Putin the Kremlin has consolidated power at home and abroad.
The aim of this book is to explain the Kremlin’s economic strategy and to assess whether it has succeeded in achieving its aims. Since the beginning of the Putin era, Russia’s leaders have had the following goals, in order of priority: maintaining power, expanding Russian influence abroad, and developing Russia’s economy at home. To achieve these goals, the Kremlin has implemented a three-pronged strategy:
Strengthen central authority, ensuring the Kremlin has the power and the money to enforce its writ.
Prevent popular discontent by guaranteeing low unemployment and adequate pensions.
Rely on private business to improve efficiency, but only where it does not contradict the previous two strategies.
These are the three pillars of Putinomics. In instances where these principles do not conflict, the Kremlin’s decision making is easy. Where Russia’s government faces a choice, it consistently prefers to safeguard central authority even at the expense of incomes or efficiency. The political elite, as well as many ordinary Russians, thinks this prioritization makes sense. Most Russians believe that the decline of state authority during the country’s traumatic 1990s contributed to its economic problems. The maintenance of a decisive and unified central government is therefore widely seen in Russia as a precondition for achieving all other economic goals.
The Kremlin’s skill in mustering and distributing resources explains why the Russian elite has maintained power for nearly two decades, and how it has deployed power abroad with some success. Many oil-fueled dictatorships squander their oil revenues on Ferrari sports cars and Fendi handbags. Russia’s ostentatious oligarchs have accumulated their share of English football teams and hundred-million-dollar yachts armed with missile defense systems.¹⁶ But unlike its own spendthrift 1990s, Russia during the 2000s saved hundreds of billions of dollars during the good years, stowing resources in reserve funds for use when oil prices fell. If the Kremlin’s economic policy was as simplistic as is often portrayed—as a series of thefts and errors lubricated by oil revenue—its rulers would not still hold power even as they wage two foreign wars.
The three-pronged strategy that defines Putinomics explains much about Russian economic policy making. The government’s consistently conservative fiscal and monetary policy—avoiding large deficits, foreign debts, and rapid inflation—is an expression of the Russian elite’s commitment to stable government finances. The role that oligarch-dominated state-owned firms play in energy and other key sectors is justified in part by their willingness to support the Kremlin in managing the populace by keeping unemployment low, media outlets docile, and political opposition marginalized. Much of the country’s pro-Putin media, for example, is owned not by the government directly but by oligarchs or by state-owned energy firms. The government’s social strategy—underfunding health and education but keeping pensions steady—is evidence that the Kremlin values pensions’ contribution to social stability more than it regrets the extent to which poor schooling impairs medium-term growth. The government’s emphasis on low unemployment, even at the expense of higher average wages, illustrates the emphasis on social stability. Where private businesses have succeeded, it is in sectors that do not conflict with the Kremlin’s more important economic and political goals.
Has this strategy worked? Russia’s political elite has achieved its goals. Putin is still in power, and the groups and individuals that have supported him have done well. Russia plays a bigger, if not necessarily friendlier, role on the world stage today. Meanwhile, until recently, the country’s elite and populace have flourished. Average Russians saw rapid income growth during the 2000s, and though wages have been roughly stagnant since then, low unemployment and stable pensions have kept average Russians from complaining. Putin has overtaken Leonid Brezhnev as the second-longest-serving Russian leader since the time of the tsars, behind only Joseph Stalin. From the perspective of the individuals who crafted Putinomics, as well as from the elite groups and social classes that backed it, these achievements represent a success. Putinomics was a coherent response to the dilemmas of the 1990s: persistent budget deficits and inflation, financial instability, and a weak central state. Macroeconomic stability, underwritten not only by higher energy prices but also by a new elite political consensus that supported low deficits and low inflation, made possible the boom in investment and consumption of the 2000s. The political preferences of the Russian elite corresponded with sensible macroeconomic policy making. The problems that the Putin coalition wanted to solve were many of the key issues that impaired economic growth in the 1990s.
On other policy questions, however, including issues such as market competition, regulation, and the rule of law, the pillars of Putinomics are conducive to political control but not to economic growth. Oligarchs and state-owned firms write the rules in their favor. They can do so because of their crucial political role. The economic effects of this political system are negative: lower investment and reduced efficiency. At the same time, the government’s investment strategy focuses on politically useful vanity projects rather than productive investments in health or education. This explains both why Russia’s elite has held on to power and why Russian economic growth has slowed. The political consensus that provided sensible macroeconomic policies in the 2000s persists. But the dilemmas Russia has faced since the 2008 crisis are different than those of Putin’s first decade in power. Then, Russia needed fiscal and monetary stabilization. Today, Russia needs better rules to encourage investment coupled with efforts to prepare workers for higher-skilled jobs. Since the protests that accompanied his return to power in 2012 and the annexation of Crimea in 2014, however, Putin’s political coalition has shifted away from the groups most likely to support this type of economic change. Instead, the Kremlin has doubled down on the politics of stability—meaning that living standards will continue to stagnate for the foreseeable future, but Russia’s political elite will have the resources needed to retain power at home and to play a resurgent role on the world stage.
NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION
Where possible, I have followed the Library of Congress’s system for transliterating Russian words and names, except that I do not denote hard and soft signs, which will be obvious to Russian speakers and irrelevant to non-Russian speakers. Where Russian names already have a commonly used English transliteration that contradicts the Library of Congress system, I use the more common version. Thus readers will normally see Alexei, but I will transliterate the name of the former minister and central banker as Alexey Ulyukaev,
for example. Confusingly, some of the names of individuals discussed have been published in English with multiple spellings.
PUTINOMICS
CHAPTER 1
Putin’s Economic Inheritance
President Boris Yeltsin was on vacation when the crisis smashed into Russia in mid-August 1998. Storm clouds had been gathering for months. Russia’s government was debt-ridden and nearly bankrupt, reliant on short-term loans to pay pensions and fund basic public services. The Kremlin spent too much and raised too little in taxes, filling the difference by borrowing at extortionate interest rates or by printing money, which fueled inflation. By the summer of 1998, as Russia’s borrowing rates spiked ever higher, everyone knew that a painful adjustment was inevitable. The only question was when it would come—and how traumatic it would be.
On July 13, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) led a coalition of international lenders in announcing $22.6 billion of financial support for Russia.¹ In exchange, Russia’s government promised sharp tax hikes and spending cuts, a package that was political suicide. But Russia’s leaders had no choice but to agree. Yeltsin cut short his summer vacation to assemble parliamentary support for the necessary legislative changes. By early August, however, the political process in Russia had ground to a halt. The government and the Duma disagreed over how to resolve the country’s budgetary imbalance. Everyone in Yeltsin’s government and in the Duma believed that Russia had time to debate, to discuss, and to play political games. They underestimated the speed with which debt investors were losing faith in Russia’s ability to repay—and losing interest in repeatedly rolling over Russia’s short-term debt. Yeltsin himself was disengaged. After failing to broker a solution to the political impasse, the president returned to his summer vacation just as the situation was beginning to spin out of control.²
Speculative attacks on emerging market currencies had sparked chaos in Thailand, Indonesia, and South Korea earlier that year, and many investors—including those whose loans funded Yeltsin’s government—were nervously asking whether Russia would be next. The victims of crisis in Southeast Asia had all been forced to devalue their currencies, a move that amounted to a tax on consumers. When the Indonesian rupiah and Thai baht crashed in 1997 and 1998, those countries’ citizens were made poorer in dollar terms, and in response they drastically cut back on purchases of imports, bought with dollars. This restored these countries’ financial balance at the cost of impoverishing consumers.
Russia appeared on the brink of a similar fate. The currency was overvalued, and the central bank was spending huge sums to prop it up, keeping it pegged at a set rate against the dollar. The overvalued ruble not only made Russian exports less competitive but also created a dilemma for the central bank, which had a limited quantity of dollars with which to buy rubles.³ Yet Russians and foreigners alike were looking to sell rubles and get their hands on a more stable currency. Unless the situation turned, the central bank would run out of dollars and be forced to abandon the ruble’s peg. Economists refer to such a move as floating the currency. This was the wrong metaphor: if the central bank stopped supporting the ruble, it would sink like a rock.
Yeltsin loudly and clearly
declared that Russia would not devalue the ruble. Prime Minister Sergey Kiriyenko promised that there will be no changes in the monetary policy of the central bank.
⁴ But talk is cheap, and the Kremlin did not back it up with actions. The more the government insisted that it would stand by the currency and repay its debts, the more investors concluded that it was time to sell. On August 13, markets began to panic as investors raced for the exit. Foreigners and Russians alike dumped rubles and bought dollars, forcing the Russian central bank to spend down its dollar reserves to dangerously low levels. New lending to the Russian government all but stopped, as interest rates on one-month government bonds reached 160 percent. The Moscow stock exchange plummeted so rapidly that trading was repeatedly suspended.⁵
Something had to give. Prime Minister Kiriyenko appealed for more foreign aid but was turned down. He was left with no choice but to surrender. The central bank let the ruble fall against the dollar. Starting at six rubles per dollar, the ruble fell to twenty-five. Consumer prices more than doubled.⁶ Russians paid the cost of adjustment as they discovered that their wages suddenly bought only half as many goods as before.
At the same time, the government announced it would default on its debts, forcing bond holders to bear some pain, too. Russian banks that held government bonds teetered on the brink of bankruptcy, a trend that was exacerbated by depositors rushing to withdraw their money and stuff it under the mattress. As the ruble plummeted, demand for dollars was so high that currency exchange booths ran out of cash.⁷ Russia,
grumbled one disillusioned investor, now ranks somewhere between Nigeria and Kenya.
⁸
The Roots of the Crisis
The financial crash of 1998 was widely interpreted as the first crisis of Russian capitalism. In fact it was the last gasp of Soviet socialism. The disagreements about economic policy that divided Russia during the 1990s—conflicts so sharp that they led Yeltsin to shell parliament in 1993, as the country teetered on the brink of civil war—gave way to a new and unexpected elite consensus. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, political disputes over taxes and spending caused the government to run massive budget deficits. By 1999, political conflict had been replaced by a surprising new consensus in favor of cautious fiscal and monetary policy. The new consensus solidified the role of market mechanisms in most sectors of the economy but recognized the need to strengthen the state, especially in the resource-rich energy sector.
The rise of an elite consensus in favor of balanced budgets and low inflation was unexpected, particularly after a decade of economic disbalances driven by political clashes. Beginning in the late 1980s, USSR general secretary Mikhail Gorbachev’s program of perestroika sought to create markets to replace Soviet-style command methods of organizing industry and agriculture. Gorbachev soon discovered that a shift toward market economics brought short-run pain before any long-run gain. The Soviet system had long coupled command methods with a system of exorbitant subsidies for politically favored groups. These subsidies had to be unwound if the Soviet economy was to be modernized. But doing so required a complicated and dangerous negotiation with the powerful groups that benefited from them.
The USSR’s vast military-industrial complex, for example, faced few constraints on its demands for funds. By the late 1980s, the Red Army and the industries that supplied it consumed around a fifth of Soviet output.⁹ The USSR’s system of collective and state farms wasted tractors and fertilizer on a vast scale, yet farmers’ incomes were propped up by the largest farm subsidy program in human history.¹⁰ Many other industries received similar handouts. If market economics meant subsidy cuts that reduced their well-being, why should industries, farmers, or the military support market reform?¹¹
As Gorbachev began pushing the Soviet economy toward a market system, powerful interest groups demanded compensation. Gorbachev would have preferred to force change. But though the Soviet Union was an authoritarian state, the general secretary was far from an absolute dictator. Many groups had the clout to obstruct Gorbachev’s efforts, so Gorbachev had to buy off
those who were made worse off by change, providing reparations for the cost of reform. Because the Kremlin had to cut deals in exchange for reforms, it faced a growing mismatch between its ever-growing spending promises and the painful reality of declining revenues.
The problem of higher budget deficits was easy to diagnose, but it proved impossible to control. In exchange for legislation that unwound collective farms and privatized agriculture, for example, the farm lobby extracted debt write-offs and financial help. The military budget—little of which improved citizens’ well-being—escaped cuts throughout the late 1980s. Capital investment in industry spiked upward in the first years of perestroika, despite evidence that such funds were spent as inefficiently as ever, with little return on the billions of rubles invested.
Capital investment was in large part a means for distributing funds to powerful industrial groups, which demanded support in exchange for tolerating Gorbachev’s move toward a market economy. The result was a paradox: even as Soviet legislation demanded that the economy be organized along market lines, Soviet enterprises and consumers faced incentives that—thanks to subsidies—had nothing to do with markets at all.
The expansion of subsidies stressed the Soviet budget, but they might have been survivable were it not for a sharp decline in revenue. An ill-conceived war on alcohol consumption slashed the tax take from drink sales just as sliding world oil prices squeezed profits on oil exports. The combination of rising spending and declining revenue pushed the Soviet Union toward fiscal crisis. The Kremlin tried borrowing to bridge its deficit, but no one was willing to lend the Soviet government the vast sums it needed. Gorbachev could not hike taxes or cut spending without threatening his hold on power. The only option was to print money.
In a market economy,