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Thursday, April 18, 2013

Putin's Popularity Wanes as Russia's Boom Ends

SPAR Krasnoyarsk, Russia - Nov 2012
SPAR Krasnoyarsk, Russia - Nov 2012 (Photo credit: Minale Tattersfield Roadside Retail)
By CNBC

Moscow, Apr.18, best stock to buy .- Cracks are showing in Russia's leadership as a slowdown in the economy is beginning to cause rifts at the heart of the government, with one academic telling CNBC on Thursday that the economy poses the biggest threat to the country's leadership.
Prime Minister Dimtry Medvedev warned on Wednesday that while Russia's economy had not performed badly in 2012, falling commodity prices risked pushing the country into a recession, but the government will stick to its adopted fiscal rule, he told parliament on Wednesday.
Medvedev's comments came after the Russian economic ministry cut the country's economic growth forecasts for 2013 to 2.4 percent this year from 3.6 percent. Russia's economy has posted slower growth for five consecutive quarters.
Putin Out?
Richard Edgar Pipes, professor of Russian History at Harvard University, told CNBC that there was a danger that prolonged weakness in the economy could harm Putin, whose popularity among the Russian electorate has been waning for some time.
"Around 52 percent of Russians do not want him to run for presidency again, which is astonishing," Pipes told CNBC at a meeting of the Russia Forum, an annual business and investment conference, held in Moscow.
"If the economy begins to weaken there will be a demand for big change. Whether it's liberal or anti-liberal depends on whoever promises the improvement in the economy," he told CNBC on Thursday.
According to Pipes, foreign investors who were apprehensive about Russia as a "safe"place to invest would be more receptive to a Russia with Medvedev at the top.
"Foreign investors are loathe to invest in this country because they are not sure the investment is good. Investors are [easily scared]and they like to invest in Switzerland or the U.S. because they like to guarantee that their investments are safe. If Medvedev were to become the top man in Russia, investments would flow more readily than under Putin," he said, adding that their styles were very different.
"I think Putin is more autocratic and Medvedev is more liberal. Medvedev has said things that Putin would not have said. The rift maybe about more authority or less authority and more democracy or less democracy. Medvedev conforms to the western idea of a president," Pipes said.
Criticism Grows
Russia's industrial output was flat in the first quarter and the world's second-largest oil producer has been hit by a decline in oil prices.
The economy's decline has prompted fears of another recession with some criticizing the fiscal rule brought in under Putin that bases spending plans on the long-term average oil price and caps the budget deficit at one percent of gross domestic product (GDP).
In a sign the government could change its stance, Medvedev said the government would consider other stimulus measures to push growth closer to the target rate of 5 percent this year, if the economic slowdown continued.
His comments came after President Vladimir Putin threatened to fire senior officials if they did not follow his orders over social spending, prompting media speculation that Putin's comments were a thinly-disguised attack on Medvedev's leadership. On Wednesday, the Moscow Times newspaper reported that there could be a cabinet reshuffle soon.
Russia's next central bank chief, Elvira Nabiullina, who takes over in June, said that Russia's economy was performing below its potential level of 3 to 4 percent growth. But she added the central bank should not sacrifice its main policy goals, such as lower inflation, for the sake of higher economic growth.
"I am against boosting economic growth at the expense of ... inflation," Nabiullina told reporters late on Wednesday. Russia is fighting a battle against inflation which rose to 7.3 percent in February, up from 3.7 percent a year before. ...
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