Nikolai Kulbaka on how Russia’s budget deficit is planned to be addressed, whether to trust Russian official statistics and why nominal GDP growth does not mean a healthy national economy.
Summary:
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The Russian government will further cut spending on health care, education and culture.
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More efficient private investment is being replaced by inefficient public spending while consumer spending is falling.
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The opaqueness of Russian statistics is already hurting government policymaking. It is practically impossible for financial sector officials to make the right decisions without good statistics.
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Instead of investing in new, efficient production facilities, the military-industrial complex is spending most of its money on duplicating and repairing long-obsolete defense products. New designs have been shelved. As have long-term infrastructure projects. So, the biggest losses for Russia are still ahead.
It’s crazy what Russia could have been instead of the cleptocracy it ended up as.
I mean if you look through russian history, it’s a pretty common theme.
One of the jokes is that the history of Russia can be summed up in one short sentence: “And then things got worse”
“In Russia, everything changes in 10 years, but nothing changes in 100 years.” Well-known quote in Russia