The presidential inauguration is scheduled to take place
in a month's time. The president isn't exactly new, but political analysts
are still wondering what his policy priorities for the next four years
will be: strengthening the hierarchy of governance still further, perhaps,
or pursuing economic stability, reforms, and establishing civil society.
Here is an interview with Grigory
Yavlinsky, leader of the YABLOKO party.
Question: The Central Electoral Commission released the official
results of the presidential election on March 23. Vladimir Putin got 71.31%
of the vote, or over 49 million votes. It is widely believed that all
these citizens voted for economic stability.
Yavlinsky: They voted as they did because they lacked
an opposition to choose any other type of economic development –
a different model of development for health care, education, the military,
housing and utilities. They voted as they did due to a lack of alternatives.
Question: But you deprived them of alternatives, by deciding
not to run for president. Citizens had no other candidate to vote for.
Yavlinsky: I decided against running for president
because I wanted to make a statement to the effect that this event did
not qualify as an election. Actually, the election doesn't matter as much
as the political climate created over the past four or five years. It
isn't what I'd call a democratic political climate, or a real choice.
Question: By the way, Putin says his priorities are to create
a competitive political system and establish a bona fide multi-party system
in Russia.
Yavlinsky: This is just an attempt to improve Russia's
image, nothing more. When the national leader says that Russia is a democracy
working to create a competitive society, that is precisely what journalists
will report in all the newspapers. Everyone will find it to their liking
- Western leaders and Russia's liberal intelligentsia. Particularly the
latter, since the intelligentsia is almost weeping in gratitude that the
president is saying what they want to hear from him. All the same, it's
good that the president is saying it. It would have been much worse if
he declared the opposite objectives. And of course, it would be just great
if he actually started to implement the objectives he proclaims.
Question: The objectives stated by Putin and your party
are quite similar: fighting corruption and poverty, pursuing military
reforms...
Yavlinsky: The objectives like fighting corruption,
poverty, strengthening the military, broader influence in international
affairs, and so on - all these have been declared in our country since
the start of the 20th century. In fact leaders of all countries declare
objectives like that.
Question: But these are goals that can be achieved via
different means, and you have withdrawn your support from President Putin
because you consider his methods to be incorrect. So which methods are
correct, in your opinion?
Yavlinsky: The real difference is that I believe a
modern economy can only be created by free individuals. That's essential,
in order for Russia to be competitive. It requires well-informed, well-educated,
self-confident people - individuals who can defend themselves in court
and enjoy at least a minimum of social security. Some entirely different
policies should be pursued to achieve this: policies aimed at establishing
a truly independent judiciary, and a system of civilian oversight for
the secret services and law and enforcement agencies. These policies should
permit independent national newspapers and television networks to organize
public debates - for example, on the rate and methods of economic growth...
These policies should aim to dismantle the oligarchic system. I'm not
talking about harassing individual oligarchs, no. I'm talking about a
new attitude entirely. This is what could lead to true economic growth.
Question: But some people maintain this is exactly where
Russia is heading. The Duma has even passed legislation on reforming the
local government system.
Yavlinsky: All that doesn't exceed the level of empty
declarations. Virtually every incident in our lives offers evidence that
some entirely different principles are being used in state
policy. The gap between legislation and real life is enormous.
Question: Do you mean to say there have been no reforms at
all in Russia during Putin's first four years in the Kremlin?
Yavlinsky: There have been reforms, all right. Regional
representation - the Federation Council - was abolished. Independent television
networks - NTV, TV-6, TVC - have disappeared. Even the Duma's relative
independence is now gone. The damage done to the judicial system is incredible
- it has lost every vestige of respect. The past four years have been
a period of important processes that augmented the system of peripheral
capitalism which first arose between 1993 and 1996. These are the results
of the reforms initiated by Putin. To prevent our conversation from becoming
pointless, we need to understand the standpoint from which we are discussing
Russia. If we compare Russia to Argentina, Gabon, or some other country
like that, then Russia is no worse than they are. It is even doing better
than some of them. But if we're talking in terms of the future, if we're
talking about whether Russia can ever become a First World country and
a fully-fledged member of the European community... then the picture is
quite different. If you ask me, Russia will inevitably encounter problems
with simple survival unless it becomes a developed nation.
Question: Do you mean it could disappear from the map?
Yavlinsky: Yes, it may find the competition too much.
It would be extremely difficult for Russia to remain a sovereign state
- given its vast territory, and the world's longest borders with the world's
least stable regions. A powerful economy is needed to protect our borders,
our resources, and our state.
Question: Some say that peace will come to Iraq within two
years, and oil prices will collapse - and then another economic crisis
awaits Russia.
Yavlinsky: I don't think much of this forecast. It
requires oil prices of under $15 a barrel, and I don't think that's possible
in the near future, not when there are markets like China
and India. As for the more distant future, the problem may indeed become
quite serious.
Question: What about the objective of doubling the GDP?
Yavlinsky: Go ahead. Double it. But this is growth without
development. It's like a person's legs, arms, and midriff growing, while
the heart remains unchanged. Growth without development would enable the
GDP to be doubled. The rate of growth was even higher in the Soviet Union
- but where is it now? It collapsed. And its growth rates amounted to
10-12% a year, or even 15%. They relied on increased output of oil, natural
gas, and other raw materials. We will encounter some serious problems
when global oil consumption falls. Not even prices, just consumption.
For example, when hydrogen-powered vehicles come into general use. Some
major markets will remain, however - China, India, and Russia. We will
have to correct the phrase that Russia is a raw materials appendage of
the West. We will be an appendage of the East then.
We have high growth rates nowadays, and considerable opportunities to
get additional resources, because of high oil prices. But let's take a
look at the results from the standpoint of social modernization. What
is the impact on the modernization of the system of health care, education,
national security, the Armed Forces, housing and utilities? On all those
vital areas?
Question: But this is why the government is intent on levying
this natural resources rent that everyone is talking about.
Yavlinsky: But we have already made a great deal of
money due to above-target export revenues over the past four years. The
real issue is finding an economic mechanism to convert this revenue into
the modernization of society.
Question: The government is talking about higher export
duties nowadays. According to Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, the budget
will get an extra $3 billion a year with oil prices above $30 a barrel.
Perhaps this is just the money that will be spent on health care and education.
Yavlinsky: I don't know that for certain. And you do
not know.
Question: You appear convinced that Putin and the new Cabinet
will be unable to implement any reforms - but Igor Artemyev, a member
of your party, has just taken up an appointment as director of the Federal
Anti-Monopoly Service.
Yavlinsky: What I believe or disbelieve doesn't matter.
This is not a question of faith or belief - it is a question of practical
steps. Secondly, all of us - whether YABLOKO members or not - are living
in this country. We lived here under Brezhnev, Andropov, and Chernenko.
Everyone had a job, and everyone did his or her best to make life better.
It is no different now; people are doing what they can. You, for example,
believe we lack independent media in Russia - and yet you remain a journalist,
right? Our position was different when we still retained some hope that
everything would be different after Yeltsin. We wanted to retain the resource
of confidence in us, to pursue a different policy. Economic reforms are
always very effective when the citizenry trusts the reformers and doesn't
see them as thieves and crooks. This is the resource we wanted to save
for the nation. But as we all know, unfortunately, Yeltsin carried out
a maneuver that made alternatives impossible. This state of affairs may
last for some time now. We've already been told that there will be a successor
to Putin...
Question: When the Cabinet was formed, there were rumours
of some clandestine agreements on YABLOKO members being included –
but something went awry, allegedly, so YABLOKO took legal action...
Yavlinsky: That's nonsense. How could we expect to
be placed in control of the government when we didn't even get past the
5% threshold?
Question: Do you think anything at all has been done to
develop a modern economy in Russia?
Yavlinsky: It is possible to invent a better taxation
system, or make decisions about natural resources rent, for example. It
is possible to keep on and on improving legislation, endlessly. However,
there are some fundamental conditions without which a modern economy will
never arise. Just two words: liberty and justice. We shall never achieve
the quality of development we need without these two conditions. The rate
of growth is a secondary issue.
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