Russian Federation: Market Liberalization, Authoritarianism, and Oil
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Transcript Russian Federation: Market Liberalization, Authoritarianism, and Oil
Russian Federation: Market
Liberalization,
Authoritarianism, and Oil
The formation of the USSR
Formed in 1917: Bolsheviks against Czar
Nicholas II.
Lenin and Marx: The communist party and capitalism
New Economic Program: hybrid of capitalism and
socialism
The ideals of communism: Redistribution of
power to the proletarian.
Stalin and the birth of the command economy.
Soviet Authoritarianism, 20 million deaths, the
repression of media and political dissent.
Ethnicity in the USSR: the Russianization of the
region.
Oil and the Command Economy
Control
over resources and infrastructure:
State run monopolies and the
consolidation of power in Central Asia.
Map of the Current Federation
Formed after the fall of
the USSR in 1991
following a failed
coup.
Causes of failure:
Misallocation of goods
and services, an
overemphasis on
industry over
agriculture, Cold War
Military expenditure.
Is Central Asia a
member of the
federation?
The Privatization of Russia
Failure
of Socialism required new
economic model: Capitalism.
Foreign Direct Investment and the
Dismantling of the Command Economy.
Loss of State revenue and debt.
By 1998 Russia’s debt was 90 percent of its
GDP.
The birth of the Oligarch
Rise
in cost of goods and loss of personal
savings: limiting the entrepreneur.
Sale of state run industries: political
power, corruption and bribes.
Consolidation of wealth and power and the
effects on social services.
NeoLiberalism in Russia: Shock
Therapy
Dramatic rise in the
costs of goods.
Life expectancy:
Male: 1990 63.9, 2003 59
Female: 1990 74.4, 2003
72
No other country in the
world has experienced
this large of a difference
during peacetime.
Causes: Job loss, stress
and alcoholism.
Neoliberalism and the Rise of a
New Russian Authoritarianism
Authoritarianism:
of or pertaining to a
governmental or political system, principle,
or practice in which individual freedom is
held as completely subordinate to the
power or authority of the state, centered
either in one person or a small group that
is not constitutionally accountable to the
people.
Continued…
Privatization
of Russian Oil empowers
multinational oil companies and oligarchs.
Russian state losses revenue to pay for
social services: social unrest.
Multinational oil companies pushing
private oil companies to construct new
pipelines in Central Asia that by-pass
Russia.
Weakens Russia’s regional power
Gazprom
Primarily
State owned oil and gas
monopoly: Vladimir Putin the next
president of Gazprom?
The imprisonment of an Oligarch: Yukos
and Mikhail Khodorkovsky.
Videos
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business/
july-dec04/yukos_12-23.html#
Conclusion
The
rapid privatization and
neoliberalization of Russian industry in the
1990’s and early 2000’s were responsible
for the return of authoritarianism in Russia.
People’s experience with privatization,
their loss of well-being, has given political
support to Putin’s aggressive authoritarian
tactics.