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Dmitri Medvedev Seeks
New Global Economic Structures
By Peter Fedynsky
08 June 2009
President Dmitri Medvedev is again proposing major international
economic reforms even as he acknowledges that over-reliance on
extractive industries, corruption, and inflation are hampering
modernization of the Russian economy.
Russian President Dmitri
Medvedev speaks at investment forum in St. Petersburg, Russia, 05 Jun
2009
In his keynote address to the annual Saint Petersburg Economic Forum,
President Medvedev called for new standards to regulate international
financial markets, new rules of energy cooperation, new reserve
currencies, including the Russian ruble, and new financial institutions
Mr. Medvedev says these should, in the final analysis, be fundamentally
new institutions, that will not be dominated by individual political
plots, motives, governments or countries.
Russian leaders have been pushing the idea of replacing existing
international financial institutions and reserve currencies over the
past year. Economic expert Yevgeny Volk, director of the Heritage
Foundation in Moscow, told VOA the Kremlin proposals are motivated in
part by a desire to reduce U.S. global economic influence. He notes,
however, that the Russian economy is only one-fifth the size of
America's.
Today's Kremlin rulers, says Volk, want to reinforce their superpower
ambitions in the political arena, and the economic aspect involves
showing that the ruble is capable of an international role, which would
simultaneously demonstrate that Russia is a great nation.
President Medvedev told the Forum that Russia is in a relatively early
stage of economic development, relies too heavily on extractive
industries, and is mired in centuries of corruption. He said his country
has a critical need to develop an intellectual or knowledge-based
economy. This, he notes, would require dominance of the middle class,
ability to react to a rapidly changing world, active entrepreneurs, and
a mobile society.
The Russian leader says every person must understand a rather simple
thing: it is necessary to become more mobile, sometimes changing jobs
and even location to ensure the comfort of families and the education of
children.
But
Yevgeny Volk says Kremlin talk of diversification and mobility amounts
to sloganeering. He says ordinary Russians are reluctant to move, and
notes their government has not taken concrete steps that would encourage
them to do so.
Volk says the Russian housing market is at a beginning stage, and living
conditions differ sharply in various regions of the country. The
European part of Russia, he says, is more developed, but the
infrastructure needed for civilized work is virtually non-existent in
those areas most in need of labor - Siberia, the Far East and in
sparsely populated areas.
For the foreseeable future, the Russian economy is likely to rely on
energy exports and the global price of oil. Deputy Prime Minister Igor
Sechin told the Saint Petersburg Forum that $75 per barrel is a fair
price, but warned it could hit $150 dollars within three years if
investments are not made to increase production. |