A Fistful of Rubles
By Jim Rogers
Russia's version of a free-market economy follows the wild-west model. call it outlaw capitalism. To do business, you'll need hired thugs and an ak-47.
I was in Russia's Manezh shopping center, near the Kremlin, when a bomb exploded. One person was killed, and more than 30 were injured. The story made headlines back in the U.S. Yet I couldn't help but notice that news of the blast was of little interest in Vladivostok, Khabarovsk, Svobodny, and Ulan-Ude. Politicians in Moscow may worry about the International Monetary Fund or the loss of Chechnya, but these are not matters that concern the Russians who live outside of Moscow.
This is the paradox of Russia today. Since the fall of Communism and breakup of the Soviet Union, Russia itself has become a fragmented country. Very little now holds it together. Certainly not the economy. Between 1990 and 1996, Russia's gross domestic product fell by a full third. It grew slightly in 1997, but that proved only a brief reprieve. The following year brought the devaluation of the ruble. Russia's traditional trade surplus has continued to contract, largely because of soft international commodity prices -- brought on, ironically, by its own dumping of commodities on world markets.
President Boris Yeltsin has introduced many changes and reforms, but Russia's economy still lacks many of the basic things it needs to prosper. These include tangibles such as improved telecommunications and new factories, but they also include legal and other systems that enable the accumulation and protection of capital in a way that benefits society.
Many of the improvements have been made only on the surface. There are new shops, but few new distribution centers. There are new restaurants, but few new farm implements. The Kremlin got a face-lift, but there isn't one soundly run commercial bank in the entire country.
The telephone and electric services are erratic. Most roads are barely passable. You can't drink the tap water, and there is little or no indoor plumbing in any of Russia's villages or towns. Except for Moscow and a few other showcases, there are weeds, rust, peeling paint, and crumbling cement everywhere you look. Buildings that would be declared derelict by inspectors in any second- or first-world country are still in use here. Even in the fanciest hotels, there is rarely soap, towels, or toilet paper. (Tip: If you plan to visit Russia in the near future, bring your own toilet seat.)
The fall of Communism gave Russians the freedom to become rich after centuries of enslavement. For now, though, the reality is that a great many are poor. Officially, unemployment stands at 12 percent, but I'd say it's actually closer to the 25 percent level that occurred during the Great Depression in the U.S. The New York Times recently estimated that as many as 40 million Russians live on less than $30 a month.
And yet in many Russian cities, a new breed of wealth has been born, one that has feasted off the collapse of the Soviet Union. Many of the nouveau riche were once the managers of state-owned enterprises under Communism. As the USSR collapsed, these people grabbed factories, inventories, and stockpiles of raw materials that they had controlled, and then sold everything to the West in a gigantic fire sale. They made hundreds of millions of dollars, which they have since stored safely away in Swiss bank accounts.
With their authority enforced by hired bodyguards and paid troops, these former Communist managers run their old enterprises as they see fit and proclaim themselves emperors. I'm reminded of the cattle and land barons who once ruled the American West, building empires for themselves while those in their service went hungry. The major difference is that these new Russians own and operate refineries, aluminum plants, vast agricultural operations, oil fields, and factories.
Not surprisingly, these newly wealthy Russians have been erecting enormous monuments to themselves. In Krasnoyarsk, a local politician has just completed the largest house built in the city in more than 100 years.
Having simply taken their holdings by force, few Russian bosses feel much of an incentive to improve, modernize, or keep up with the latest technological developments. I visited an aluminum plant, a vodka factory, and a place that produced fur coats. In each case, the facility was inefficiently run, and the quality of the goods produced was low. In the days of Soviet Union, the attitude was the same: If the boots were poorly stitched or the bucket had a hole in it, a Russian or Pole would have to make do. It's a mentality that, for decades to come, will cripple Russia's attempt to capture a share of the world's market.
You might be thinking that a Western competitor could simply walk in, start a business, sell a better product, and make a small fortune. But that just doesn't happen. Chances are the Westerner would be taxed into bankruptcy, vandalized until he went broke, or simply killed. On this frontier, the only law is that of the AK-47. It's a capitalism of sorts but an outlaw capitalism at best.
I got an inkling of this when I visited the city of Chita. On my first day there, while I was dining in the restaurant at the Panama City Hotel, one of the local honchos -- in the States we'd call them mobsters -- asked me how I had been able to travel so far in Russia without paying a bribe.
"How do you know we haven't paid anyone off?" I answered.
"We know from our connections along your path that you haven't," he said.
After this exchange, I made sure that this man and I became bosom buddies. At the end of a rather boisterous evening, he told me to let him know if anyone bothered me on my trip. "We'll have them killed," he said. "That goes for the next city, too. You won't have any problems there, either." I didn't doubt him.
For a while, I was concerned my car might be stolen. But autos are one form of capital that Russians have learned how to safeguard. Secure parking lots with barbed wire and armed attendants have sprung up in every town.
Another way that Russians safeguard their wealth is to set up shop across the border. The city of Ulan Bator, the capital of Mongolia, has become a major beneficiary of this trend. Ulan Bator has a genuine infrastructure. Recently, it was wired with fiber-optic cable. I was able to connect to the Internet from my hotel room, something I couldn't do anywhere in Russia.
It has finally bubbled to the surface in the Western press that much of the Western aid sent to help Russia rebuild has been stolen by those to whom it was entrusted. The reports of rampant theft by the oligarchs and chief mobsters are causing widespread public resentment. Russia has sacrificed everything -- its empire, its currency, its reputation -- to enrich a few. For Russia itself to survive and prosper, either as a whole or in various bits and pieces, the politicians who run the country will have to obey the simplest of economic laws: There can be no real gains in an economy until stewardship is taken seriously and investments are put into true productive capacities. Until then, Russia will remain a third- world country. Capital has its own laws, laws as inexorable as those of gravity. And until Russia comes to respect capital and provide for its safety and nourishment, capital won't come to its aid. Intelligent capital doesn't aid thieves and outlaws.
Senior contributing editor Jim Rogers is on a three-year trip to research the state of the world at the turn of the millennium. Updates are available at www.jimrogers.com. |