As a nation, Russia has always been a significant
outlier. It maintained a monarchical
system long after other European countries progressed to forms of
representative government. It was still
led by the Tsar as Russia entered World War I.
The Tsar was supported by a class of nobles and was just a few decades past
finally releasing (for a price) their serfs from involuntary servitude. Then, against all odds, the nation succumbed
to a communist revolution that immediately brought entirely new economic and
political elements to bear in a remarkable experiment. That experiment failed with Russia and its
Soviet Union dissolving. That set off
another remarkable experiment as Russia and other former communists nations had
to transform themselves into some form of representative government and accept
modern capitalism as the economic paradigm.
Russia again chose a unique path which resulted in what in many ways
looks similar to the Tsarist days with the Tsar being replaced by Vladimir
Putin and his supporting nobles becoming billionaire oligarchs who support him
and do his bidding.
In the course of this history, Russia went from one of
the most unequal societies to one of the most equal and then all the way back
to extreme inequality. These are the
types of transitions that intrigue Thomas Piketty and motivated the writing of
his massive work Capital and Ideology. As he often reminds his readers, the societies
and economic systems we arrive at are not driven by fundamental laws of
economics or human nature, but rather by the circumstances we encounter and the
choices we make. In other words, they
depend on the ideologies we choose to embrace.
Piketty’s book provides considerable insight into the choices Russia
made, and allows us to better understand why Russian society was what it was in
the past and why it is what it is now.
Piketty points out, over and over again, that the
character of a society and the degree of economic inequality is a function of
how private ownership of property is treated.
He uses the term “sacralization of private property” to define the
extreme primacy given to private ownership, even if obtained by theft or
violence, over any socialization of the benefits of property ownership. Property ownership became “sacred” because
its sanctity was believed (by property owners) to be necessary for a stable
society. Property is capital, and as
Piketty pointed out in his previous work, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, capital has traditionally earned income at a higher rate than
labor. Therefore, the degree that property
is privately owned and protected from taxation and regulation will determine the
degree of economic inequality.
Russia, prior to World War I, incorporated this
sacralization of ownership similarly to other European nations, but had not
modernized its society in other ways.
“Not only had the Tsarist regime
been deeply inegalitarian; it had also failed dismally to develop Russia’s
economy, society, and schools. The
Tsarist government relied on noble and clerical classes directly descended from
premodern trifunctional society [nobles. clergy, workers]. It abolished serfdom in 1861, only a few
decades before the Russian Revolution of 1917.
At the time serfs still accounted for 40 percent of the population. At the time of abolition, the imperial
government decreed that former serfs must pay an annual indemnity to their
former owners until 1910 in return for their freedom. The spirit was similar to that of the financial
compensation awarded to slave owners when the United Kingdom abolished slavery
in 1833 and France in 1848, except that the serfs lived in the Russian heartland
rather than on remote slave islands.
Although most payment ended in the 1880s, the episode places the Tsarist
regime and Russian Revolution in perspective by reminding us of the extreme
forms that sacralization of private property and the rights of property owners
sometimes took before World War I (regardless of the nature and origin of the property).”
Given this history, it is not too surprising that a
revolution of some sort would occur, and the goal of the new government would
be to distribute the accumulated wealth of the nobles widely to form a more
egalitarian society. The communist rule
that ensued was ultimately unable to compete effectively with capitalist
systems, but initially it did provide a more modern, more efficient, and a much
more egalitarian society, although brutality was often required. Humans will naturally form a degree of hierarchy
within their society, but in communist Russia the benefits of rank were not
expressed in income but in other types of privileges.
“With the Tsarist regime as
point of comparison, the Soviet regime had no difficulty portraying its project
as one that held out great promise for the future in terms of both equality and
modernization. And in spite of
repression, ultra-centralization, and state appropriation of all property,
public investment in the period 1920-1950 clearly did lead to rapid
modernization that brought the Soviet Union closer to Western European levels,
especially in the areas of infrastructure, transportation, education (and
literacy), science, and public health.
Within a few decades the Soviet regime had considerably reduced the
concentration of income and wealth while raising the standard of living, at
least until the 1950s.”
As the political competition between the Soviet form of
communism and the US and Western European form of capitalism progressed, each
side hardened its attitudes toward private property, not daring any excursion
that might add efficiency, in order to maintain ideological purity.
“Just as the proprietarian
ideology of the nineteenth century rejected any attempt to challenge existing
property rights for fear of opening Pandora’s box, twentieth century Soviet
ideology refused to allow anything but strict state ownership lest private
property find its way into some small crevice and end up infecting the whole
system.”
The capitalist nations would begin to fear any public
ownership as a similar existential threat to private ownership.
“Ultimately, every ideology is the
victim of some form of sacralization—of private property in one case, of state
property in another; and fear of the void always looms large.”
When the Soviet Union began to falter and eventually disassemble,
the capitalists, with their sacralization of private property, did a victory
lap. They were firmly convinced that
Russia’s future must immediately involve mass privatization of public entities
lest communist tendencies reemerge and “infect the whole system.” There was clearly pressure on it to proceed
in this fashion (the so-called shock therapy).
This path would be disastrous for the Russian people and quickly create,
and exceed, the inequalities endemic in other capitalist nations. Piketty suggests that this approach—and its
outcome—may have been welcomed by an influential subset of the Russian
population.
“…in less than ten years, from
1990 to 2000, postcommunist Russia went from being a country that had reduced
monetary inequality to one of the lowest levels ever observed to being one of
the most inegalitarian countries in the world.”
“Russia chose to inflict on
itself the famous ‘shock therapy,’ whose goal was to privatize nearly all
public assets within a few years’ time by means of a ‘voucher’ system
(1991-1995). The idea was that Russian citizens
would be given vouchers entitling them to become shareholders in a firm of
their choosing. In practice, in a time
of hyperinflation (prices rose more than 2500 percent in 1992) thar left many
workers and retirees with very low real incomes and forced thousands of the
elderly and unemployed to sell their personal effects on the streets of Moscow
while the government offered large blocks of stock on generous terms to
selected individuals, what had to happen did happen. Many Russian firms, especially in the energy
sector, soon fell into the hands of small groups of cunning shareholders who
contrived to gain control of the vouchers of millions of Russians. Within a short period of time these people
became the country’s new ‘oligarchs’.”
This march to inequality and crony capitalism was further
enhanced by laws and practices quickly put in place by its leaders. Piketty says it is extremely difficult to
determine who has the money in Russia and how much they have.
“This is due in large part to
decisions taken first by the governments headed by Boris Yeltsin and later by
Vladimir Putin to permit unprecedented evasion of Russian law through the use
of offshore entities and tax havens. In
addition, the postcommunist regime abandoned not only any ambition to
redistribute property but also any effort to record income or wealth. For example, there is no inheritance tax in
postcommunist Russia, so there is no data on the size of inheritances. There is an income tax, but it is strictly
proportional, and its rate since 2001 has been just 13 percent, whether the
income being taxed is 1,000 rubles or 100 billion rubles.”
“According to the
classifications published by Forbes, Russia thus became within a few
years the world leader in billionaires in all categories…By the 2000s, the
total wealth of Russian billionaires listed in Forbes amounted to 30-40 percent of the country’s national
income, three or four times the level observed in the United States, Germany,
France, and China. Also according to Forbes,
the vast majority of these billionaires…have done particularly well since
Vladimir Putin came to power in the early 2000s. Note, moreover, that these figures do not
include all the Russians who have accumulated not billions but tens or hundreds
of millions of dollars; these Russians are far more numerous and more significant
in macroeconomic terms.”
Russia’s oligarchs have been very efficient at removing
money from Russia and investing it, mainly in real estate, in other
countries. If there is an outrageously
priced luxury apartment anywhere, there is likely a Russian billionaire or two
waiting to bid on it. Piketty estimates
the amount of money that has been moved out of Russia is mindboggling.
“…the country enjoyed enormous
trade surpluses in the period 1993-2018: Russia’s annual trade surplus averaged
10 percent of GDP over this twenty-five year period, or a total of nearly 250
percent of GDP…In principle, then, the country should have accumulated enormous
financial reserves…But Russia’s official reserves in 2018 amounted to less than
30 percent of GDP. Something like 200
percent of Russian GDP has therefore gone missing (and this does not even take
into account the income those assets should have produced).”
Oliver Bullough provided a humorous illustration of the
extent of kleptocracy in Russia in his book Moneyland: The Inside Story of the Crooks and Kleptocrats Who Rule the World.
“Luxury watches are popular
among officials, since they provide a discreet but effective way of advertising
their power. In 2009, the Russian
newspaper Vedomosti mischievously published a compilation of photographs
of the watches worn by top officials at public events, noting each one’s price
and contrasting that with the declared income of the official in question. The cheapest watch belonged to the head of
the Audit Chamber, costing a mere 1,800 Swiss francs. The majority were in the $10,000-50,000
range, beyond which a handful of officials had really splashed out. The deputy mayor of Moscow won both first and
second place, with watches costing $1.04 million and $360,000; while Chechen
president Ramzan Kadyrov’s watch came third, with an estimated price of
$300,000. The article caused some embarrassment
to top officials, which is perhaps why the official photographer photoshopped a
$30,000 Breguet timepiece off the wrist of the Patriarch of Moscow as he sat at
a highly polished table in 2012. The
photographer neglected to remove the watch’s reflection, however, which both
made the Patriarch look ridiculous and also rather undermined his attempts to
argue for a return to asceticism and traditional values under the moral
leadership of himself.”
Early on, observers were worried that Russia might slip
back into a modified form of communism.
They should have been more concerned that a bunch of Russian insiders
were tired of playing a losing game and were waiting for the opportunity to
take control and throw their weight around more effectively. Piketty describes the conclusions to be drawn
from a series of interviews of Vladimir Putin conducted by the movie maker
Oliver Stone in 2017.
“In substance, Putin concluded
that only an unambiguous renunciation of egalitarianism and socialism in all
their forms could restore Russia’s greatness, which depended above all on
hierarchy and verticality in both politics and economics.”
If Russia’s greatness is to be recovered, it will be accomplished
via the reduction of other countries’ greatness. The US seems to be a specific target. Whatever Donald Trump’s motives, he has
convinced US allies that Putin’s Russia, a longtime enemy, is potentially a
more reliable ally than the US. Apparently,
Putin has the resources and power to do anything he wishes: invade a country, interfere
in elections on a global scale, coerce the president of a country….
"Oligarchic kleptocracy" --> appropriate description
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