After eight years with Boris Yeltsin
at its helm, Russiaremains mired in political and
economic crisis. As Yabloko leader Grigory Yavlinsky
explains, not only has Russia failed to rebuild from
the wreckage of the Soviet Union, it could be in the
first stage of its destruction as a sovereign state.
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Icons of radical
reform under Yeltsin's patronage: privatization
chief Anatoly Chubais (left) with economic liberalizer
Yegor Gaidar in their days of power earlier
this decade. [photo: The Russia Journal]
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What is happening today in the Kremlin and in the
government is no secret, and no euphemisms are needed
to describe the situation. What is to be done is also
no secret. We need a new president, a different government
and amendments to the constitution. It is no good
offering help and advice to those presently in power
because their interests lie elsewhere.
The following comments are a warning that what is
happening now could signify not just the end of the
post-Soviet era, but the prologue to Russia's demise
as a sovereign state.
I doubt greatly that we can speak of a system in
this context. By definition, a system is something
stable. Without stability, even temporary stability,
there is no system. Now take a look through the Yeltsin
years for signs of anything stable.
At the beginning of 1998, the Yeltsin constitution
seemed to have produced a political system that could
lay claims to a stability of sorts. But after going
through three governments in less than one-and-a-half
years, the facts are staring us in the face - a constitution
that provides no checks and balances to the president's
heavy hand cannot contribute to stability. Sooner,
the opposite is true.
Until August 1998, Russia looked like it had a stable
ruble - the foundation for future economic growth.
The events of August 17 not only completely shattered
these illusions, but also punished those who had believed
the illusions and placed their trust in banks.
Yeltsin is given credit for not getting rid of or
persecuting political opponents - something anyone
in Russia would be grateful for. But earlier on, Gorbachev
had already put an end to these practices.
We now have a prototype of a multi-party system,
and that is indeed an achievement. But it is a fragile
one that could be destroyed if the threat to stop
holding elections by party lists is actually carried
out.
The country's laws now recognize local self-government,
but the federal authorities, in abolishing local taxes,
have sentenced it to extinction.
Everything that at some point or another could have
been called an achievement of the Yeltsin era -- a
stable currency, the banking system, an emerging middle
class -- have proved to be so many soap bubbles, burst
in an instant. Does that mean a new government would
have to start over from scratch? No. Starting from
scratch would not work anyway, we are no longer in
1991, and in many respects, the country has actually
lost ground compared to back then.
One need only turn to the statistics. Russia's GDP
shrank by half between 1990 and 1998, the share of
gross savings in the GDP fell by one-half, and investment
in capital assets tumbled by a factor of four. New
housing construction was down, with 30.3 million square
meters in 1998 compared to 49.4 million sq. m. in
1991. The ratio of the average wage to the subsistence
minimum, a crucial indicator, stood at 3.16 in 1992,
and was down to 1.48 in the first quarter of 1999.
Life expectancy decreased from 69 years in 1991 to
66 in 1998.
Then take small business, an economic and social
force in any capitalist society. Small business forms
the backbone of the middle class and is the ferment
for normal market development. The best conditions
were in place for small business development on the
eve of the Gaidar-Chubais reforms, and were then destroyed
by those very same reforms. The hyperinflation of
1992 wiped out the first entrepreneurs who rode the
cooperative movement wave of '80s. That was followed
by a privatization program that saw property going
not to those who could buy it from the state and manage
it effectively, but to those who, through vouchers,
could snap it up at fraudulently low prices, taking
advantage of legal loopholes, official power or ties
to power.
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This opinion
piece by liberal economist Grigory Yavlinsky,
head of the Yabloka political movement, originally
appeared in Obshchaya Gazeta [photo: The Russia
Journal]
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The consequences are there for all to see. The economic
sectors that kept the entire Soviet Union going for
an extra 15 years despite an appallingly inefficient
economy are now pots of gold monopolized by a mere
few thousand people. It is precisely these "super
rich" who constitute today's warring clans that
fight it out for power at the top.
Transforming this monopolistic, oligarchic capitalism
into a civilized democracy will prove far more difficult
than transforming Soviet society as it was in 1990.
For a start, the state no longer has the same resources
it had then to reform the economy and foster the development
of a middle class. Once again, the state will have
to resort to primarily political measures to promote
free competition on the market, collect taxes, keep
criminal elements out of the economy and enforce bankruptcy
procedures against ineffective owners.
Second, today's oligarchs have little in common with
perestroika-era Soviet monopolies. Soviet monopolies
could only have dreamed of having the kind of political
clout wielded by today's oligarchs.
Third, and perhaps most important, public confidence
in democratic and market reform has reached a critical
low.
When Yeltsin came to power, there was no real opposition,
either communist or nationalist, to democratic reform.
The Yeltsin years have breathed new life into a communist
movement that has grown and become better organized.
As for Russia's fascists, they can thank Yeltsin for
their emergence as an active political force and for
their swelling ranks.
At the beginning of the '90s, Yeltsin inherited from
Gorbachev a country that was coming apart at the seams,
but that had maintained intact an administrative system.
The federation subjects were ready to swallow sovereignty
as greedily as they could, but the Kremlin, it turned
out, did not know where to draw the line between greater
autonomy and total loss of federal authority.
The federal authorities are today unable to fully
guarantee observance of fundamental civil rights in
the regions or to ensure a common legal and economic
framework for the country. They cannot control even
their own representatives in the regions. Regional
governors have taken control of regional prosecutor's
offices, Interior Ministry and other Ministries' local
departments.
Boris Yeltsin is personally responsible for the direction
the country has taken. Half-baked economic reforms
can be blamed on the "young reformers,"
biased legal specialists can be blamed for the flaws
in the constitution, but responsibility for Russia's
drift into feudalism sits squarely on the president's
shoulders. He is the one who, in return for political
loyalty, closes his eyes to the way regional feudal
lords make a mockery of citizens' rights, the law
and the authority of the state. It is no coincidence
that the Kremlin is so welcoming of alliances between
the governors in the run-up to elections that will
reduce federal presence in the regions to zero.
There is much talk these days about the possible
break-up of Russia. The break-up of a state can be
a lengthy, gradual and initially barely perceptible
process. I take responsibility for asserting that
the Yeltsin era is a time of just such gradual collapse.
The economy has collapsed, bankrupting the country.
The state has disintegrated into a confederation of
feudal principalities. Society has decayed, sinking
into crime and moral decadence.
It is not Yeltsin's system that has come apart, Yeltsin
never built a system. It is the Soviet system that
has collapsed. The task facing Russia's first president
was to check the disintegration of the old system
and begin building a new system of political, economic
and social relations in its place. But to achieve
this, not just a man was needed (not even as imposing
a man as Yeltsin was), nor even just a politician.
A statesman was needed, and Yeltsin could never lay
claims to that title. Yeltsin was skilled at the art
of acquiring and keeping hold of power, but he never
knew what to actually do with it. Such a president
could not stop the process of collapse, and that explains
why all his attempts to build something stable were
swept aside by the ongoing disintegration that continued
on its own momentum.
Today, he is falling victim to his organic inability
to think like a statesman. Having failed to create
a stable political or legislative system, he finds
himself hostage to the unpredictable logic of events.
No one in Russia today, not even the president, can
guarantee that the current regime, its laws and constitution
won't be overturned by opposition forces.
In this highly unstable situation, the Kremlin seeks
at all costs to keep Yeltsin in power as the only
guarantee of personal survival. To save their own
hides, Kremlin strategists will go to great lengths,
from a crazy union with Belarus to handing over parcels
of the country to regional barons or letting criminal
clans take control of the country's financial flows.
But there are still glimmers of hope on the horizon.
The elections, for a start. Of course, no one can
guarantee for sure that they will be held lawfully
and on time, but that is the concern of politicians
and political parties. The priority for politicians
now is to ensure that nothing stops the country from
using the elections to bring new forces to power that
would stop the process of disintegration and open
a new page in Russia's history.
But the ultimate outcome depends not so much on the
politicians as on the voters. At the end of the millenium,
Russia is being given one last chance to enter the
twenty first century as a great and independent nation
with a culture to be proud of. All hope lies with
the reason and good will of Russia's people.
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