Another Big Win For Putin!!!

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Top Russian Officials Are Starting to Realize That the Country’s Economy Is in Big Trouble
By Joshua Keating

166038704-russian-president-vladimir-putin-and-german-chancellor.jpg.CROP.promovar-mediumlarge.jpg

But Russians shouldn’t worry, because freedom-loving President Vladimir Putin promises “a country that is strong, flourishing, free, and open to the world.”
Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images

MOSCOW—You wouldn’t know it from the Chanel boutiques and Maserati dealerships lining the boulevards inside Moscow’s Garden Ring, but economic conditions in Russia are becoming dire. The ruble has weakened to record lows not seen since the 1990s, capital is bleeding out of the country for the first time since the 2008 financial crisis, and the economy is projected to grow a piddling 0.5 percent this year.

JOSHUA KEATING
Joshua Keating is a staff writer at Slate focusing on international affairs and writes the World blog.

You wouldn’t realize any of this from the statements of Russia’s president. At aforum last week, Vladimir Putin ensured investors that the country has enough reserves to implement all of its budget proposals, including an $80 billion increase in military spending next year. The president certainly seemed confident, telling investors that Russia’s “strategic course remains unchanged” and that he foresees “a country that is strong, flourishing, free, and open to the world.”

Putin’s optimism rests on some pretty big assumptions, including 1.2 percent growth next year—the World Bank thinks 0.3 percent is more realistic—and $100-a-barrel oil prices. Despite turmoil in the Middle East, the price fell below $90 last week. Russia relies on oil and gas revenues for about half of its budget.

These trends could be read as a victory for the sanctions regime imposed in recent months by the U.S. and the European Union to punish Russia for its actions in Ukraine. But the truth is that the economy was looking dismal long before the sanctions came down.

“The situation became very complicated before there were any sanctions,” Andrei Nechayev, who served as Russia’s economics minister in the early 1990s, told me in an interview this week. “The main reasons are internal problems of the Russian economy: low competition, low protection of property, a bad investment climate. In 2013 we were like a falling jet fighter.”

Though sanctions against corporations have cut off access to easy Western capital, Nechayev said that Russia’s own sanctions—restrictions on food imports from the U.S. and Europe—are “much more stupid.” While it’s not as notable in Moscow, food prices have been skyrocketing in some Russian regions. The government argues that it can replace these imports by stimulating local food production, but this will take time. “You can’t speed up biology,” noted Nechayev, who is now president of the Russian Finance Corp., an investment bank. “It takes a certain amount of time to make a new cow.”

But again, even if the food restrictions were lifted tomorrow, Russia would still be in trouble. Even under a blue-sky scenario in which all geopolitical tensions vanished, the World Bank sees only 0.9 percent growth next year.

Nechayev believes budget cuts are necessary, particularly to the military, though this seems unlikely given current tensions. The government has also been reluctant to find cuts elsewhere. For instance, a proposal to eliminate the country’s maternity subsidy program, which aims to combat Russia’s demographic decline by awarding lump sum payments to mothers who have more than one child, was shot down by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev last week.

But Nechayev says that the most important thing weighing down the Russian economy is corruption. “Russian businesses face two taxes,” he said, “the legal tax and the corruption tax.”

He also feels that too often, Russia’s local and regional governments have been asked to shoulder the burden of budget cuts. “The result is that they declined investment programs, road construction, innovations programs, etc. Now regional governments are a husk just to pay salaries.”

Obviously there’s a political component to this. It’s nearly impossible for regional governors to be elected without the approval of the Kremlin. As Nechayev, who also leads a small opposition political party called Civic Initiative, noted, “Psychologically it’s not so easy to come to the person who made you the governor to say, ‘Sorry, but you have very stupid financial policies.’ The response will be, ‘OK, we’ll find another guy who’ll solve the problem.’ ”

It would be one thing if it were only liberal former officials with opposition ties like Nechayev making these arguments, but they’re increasingly being voiced by the country’s top economic officials. Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said this week that Russia’s high rates of military spending are unsustainable. “We want to reconsider the amount of resources devoted in the course of this new program, so that they are more realistic,” he told the news agency RIA Novosti. The current economics minister and the head of Russia’s central bank have publicly voiced concerns about the drying up of foreign investment.

More dramatically, the head of Russia’s largest bank, Sberbank, said last week that Russia’s current government could be repeating the mistakes of the Soviet Union, which also faced “huge structural problems” and an overreliance on oil prices. “There is one key reason which determined the rest: It’s mind-boggling incompetence of the Soviet leadership. They did not respect the laws of economic development. … We cannot allow the same situation,” said German Gref, whose bank has been targeted by international sanctions. He added that in contrast to Soviet days, today’s Russian government “cannot motivate people through the Gulag.”

The house arrest of oligarch Vladimir Yevtushenkov last month on what are widely seen as politically motivated money laundering charges also doesn’t seem likely to reassure investors that Russia is a safe bet.

As I’ve written before, Russia’s economic woes are unlikely to impact public opinion much in the short term. Putin’s political policies are extremely popular, the media is loyal, and the sanctions give the government a convenient political scapegoat. But the degree of alarm among some of the most senior figures in the Russian economy is striking.

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Ultimately, however, these arguments probably don’t hold much sway with the one man whose opinion matters. Nechayev thinks Putin may be overestimating the degree to which Russia can continue to rely on high energy prices—Russian companies are pushing aheadon plans to expand oil drilling in the Arctic—and the ease of substituting trade with countries like China, India, and Brazil for its former partners in Europe and the United States.

But economic concerns may simply not be Putin’s top priority. Putin is “very disappointed with the Western position,” Nechayev said. “Psychologically it’s very appealing to make life unpleasant for his former partners.”

I’m currently reporting in Russia thanks to a grant from the International Reporting Project at Johns Hopkins.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_worl..._is_in_big_trouble_and_it_s.html?wpsrc=fol_fb

good thing he shrugged those sanctions off
 

Domingo Halliburton

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I missed this post at first but :mjlol:

Solomon Black9 hours ago
Russians are just noise makers, in the top 160 European companies only 5 Russian companies appeared, this is a country that has twice as many natural resources than anyone, and has more population than anyone in Europe, yet they are dominated by Germany, France and Britain. Can anyone please tell me a recognizable Russian brand in the world, probably none. Russia is just a big gas station, in Forbes 2000 companies in the world, US had 564 companies, Japan had 212 and china had 200 companies, Russia didn't have more than 10 companies and yet they compare themselves to the US.

If California were a country it will have a bigger economy than Russia and more billionaires than Russia, this is how far they have fallen when a single state in the US have bigger economy than their entire country.


:dead:
 

Domingo Halliburton

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http://finance.yahoo.com/news/russian-ruble-collapsing-073800752.html

The Russian ruble has collapsed to a record low against a basket of dollars and euros despite intervention by the central bank to prop it up. The Russian central bank has spent as much as $1.75 billion from the country's foreign currency reserves to support the ruble, buying it on currency markets in an attempt to prop up its price, over the past three days, according to Bloomberg. But it has not halted the slide:

The_Russian_Ruble_Is_Collapsing-53be010d0fdccb99510a38569dfeacd5


The central bank has a target trading range for the strength of the ruble against the dollar and the euro (which it combines into a single figure) that, if breached, will cause it to intervene in currency markets. However, that target has been shifting in recent days due to the record falls moving from 35.50-44.50 on Friday to around 35.65-44.65 on Tuesday. The numbers represent the amount of putative rubles needed to buy dollars or euros.

The central bank is due to officially review the range again today. So far, burning through more of the country's reserves has done little to support the currency as grim economic forecasts, sliding oil prices, rising inflation and sanctions over the crisis in Ukraine have all taken their toll. Investors are selling their rubles for other currencies because they don't like those risks. With Russia currently holding over $400 billion in foreign currency reserves, however, this game of chicken with currency markets — in which investors sell the ruble while Russia buys it in hopes of staving off further collapse — is likely to continue.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-10-08/russia-dips-into-its-pension-fund?campaign_id=yhoo

During flush years of high oil prices and economic growth, Russia salted away more than $80 billion in a sovereign wealth fund to ensure the long-term health of the country’s pension system. Now the Kremlin is raiding the fund to bail out Russia Inc.

Russian companies and banks are lining up for aid as Western sanctions, capital flight, and the plummeting ruble curb their ability to invest and repay debt. Finance Minister Anton Siluanov told the Itar-TASS news agency last month that state-controlled oil giant Rosneft (ROSN:RM) and private gas company Novatek(NVTK:RM), both headed by close associates of President Vladimir Putin and hit by sanctions, could get as much as $4 billion apiece from the fund, whose current balance is $83 billion.

Although the exact amount of aid to the two companies hasn’t been confirmed, Vice Premier Arkady Dvorkovich said today that the government is ready to use the fund to support both public and privately owned energy companies. “The funds will be provided for a long term,” he told Itar-TASS.

STORY: Oil Prices Fall, and the Global Economy Wins
Itar-TASS reported earlier that the fund—known variously as the National Wealth Fund and the National Welfare Fund—would aid state-controlled banks VTB Bank(VTBR:RU) and Rosselkhozbank (RSHB:RU) by buying more than $6 billion of their shares.

A Bloomberg News analysis in mid-September found that sanctioned Russian companies had more than $45 billion in bonds and loans maturing over the next 12 months. Sanctions have locked them out of Western capital markets that could refinance that debt.

Putin ally Igor Sechin, who runs Rosneft, has told the Kremlin that the company may need as much as $42 billion in aid, a Russian government official told Bloomberg in August. Rosneft has more than $27 billion in debt maturing over the next year alone. Novatek, co-owned by longtime Putin friend Gennady Timchenko, doesn’t have a serious debt problem but is having trouble raising funds for planned investments.

STORY: Latvia Looks Good to Russians Unhappy With Putin
Such companies “are in a very difficult situation,” says Tim Ash, chief emerging-markets economist at Standard Bank Group in London. “They’ve looked at other options, like financing in Asia, but people are reluctant, given the uncertainty about financing Russia at the moment.”

Companies that haven’t been sanctioned are being squeezed, too, as the ruble’s sharp decline hammers their balance sheets. For example, a plan by nuclear exporter Techsnabexport to raise $500 million was scaled back to $150 million by international lenders, a person familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News.

How far is the Kremlin willing to dig into the fund, described by the Finance Ministry as “dedicated to support the pension system of the Russian Federation?” Standard Bank’s Ash says he doubts the government would empty the fund. But it is using the fund to buy shares in companies and banks, to boost their liquidity. Vice Premier Dvorkovich said today that the government would “consider temporarily placing the remainder of the National Welfare Fund into securities, including the securities of oil companies.”

STORY: How the U.S. Screwed Up in the Fight Against Ebola
The demands on the fund come at a time when its key financing source, oil and gas tax revenue, is dwindling because of falling oil prices. Brent crude prices slid todayto a two-year low of $90.76 per barrel. At that level, Russia—which gets half its budget revenue from oil and gas taxes—will face a 1.2 percent budget deficit next year.
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Get your pension raided because your president is a standoffish prick, brehs
 

Leasy

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i've heard the argument that he's clinging to office under the guise that it allows him to avoid being prosecuted.

The track record for ex-russian leaders is NOT good

Damn, what a massive L. I give him props for trying to bluff on a hand of absolute shyt but he's been called on it.

But all of this could of been avoided if he didn't think too highly of himself and his country standard and try to bring back the big bad Russian bear. The alphabet boys seen a weakness in Putin leadership and Russia in general and decided to attack strategically with the shield proposal, the Syria pipeline plan. They knew he is too aggressive and doesn't think.

He is running to China but that won't help him but make him a flunky and reliable on China who is also your neighbor :russ: China can dictate what Russian growth could be what a dumbass Putin is and they is his neighbors.
 

Type Username Here

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But all of this could of been avoided if he didn't think too highly of himself and his country standard and try to bring back the big bad Russian bear. The alphabet boys seen a weakness in Putin leadership and Russia in general and decided to attack strategically with the shield proposal, the Syria pipeline plan. They knew he is too aggressive and doesn't think.

He is running to China but that won't help him but make him a flunky and reliable on China who is also your neighbor :russ: China can dictate what Russian growth could be what a dumbass Putin is and they is his neighbors.

Wouldn't surprise me if Russia became a Chinese proxy state in the next decade. it would be one of those "wink-wink, we're independent" type of deals
 
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