Primakov Sends Kirienko to Appeal to IMF for Aid
Summary:
Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov has reportedly asked his reformist predecessor, Sergei Kirienko, to travel to Bonn to appeal to Western creditors to restructure Russia's debt. Primakov's communist economic chief has failed miserably in talks with the IMF, and perhaps Primakov hopes that a change of medium will make the message more appealing. But Russia's problems with the IMF are not something that can be rephrased away, and Primakov can not give Kirienko the authority to negotiate the necessary changes in the Russian economic plan. So the trip is a last desperate, and probably futile, effort. We understand why Primakov would give it a shot, but why would Kirienko go along with the scheme? If Kirienko goes to Germany, it will be to beg -- for Russia, for reform, for himself. We do not envy him.
Analysis:
The Russian business daily Kommersant reported on February 10 that Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov has asked his predecessor, Sergei Kirienko, to go to Germany to discuss Russia's preliminary debt restructuring proposals with Western creditors. The reformist Kirienko was sacked by Russian President Boris Yeltsin last summer, following the devaluation of the ruble and default on Russian debts by the Kirienko government, shortly after Russia received its first -- and thus far last -- tranche of an IMF loan package. The newspaper suggested that Primakov's decision to send Kirienko indicated that he had lost faith in his Communist economic chief, Yuri Maslyukov, who has until now led all debt restructuring negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for the Primakov government. Kommersant did not cite a source for this information, and Agence France Presse reported that the Russian government press office has refused to comment on the story. If true, however, it says more about Kirienko than about Primakov.
Two things are certain. Primakov would dearly like to receive debt relief and additional foreign loans, and he has every reason to ditch Maslyukov. Russia faces US$17.5 billion in foreign debt, US$4.5 billion of it owed to the IMF, maturing in 1999. Russia needs the IMF assistance not only to avoid going bankrupt, but also to help obtain the release of loans promised by the Japanese government and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Primakov's draft 1999 budget, which has already been approved by the lower house of the Russian Duma, envisions financing only US$4.5 billion of that debt. The remaining US$13 billion is assumed to be covered by debt restructuring and additional loans from the IMF or the Group of Seven (G-7) leading industrialized nations, neither of which have committed to any such aid.
Western lenders have rejected Primakov's budget as unrealistic, an easy case to make considering that among its assumptions is 30 percent inflation for 1999. Prices have already risen by 9.8 percent this year. The IMF has criticized planned tax cuts and spending increases. The budget also calls for greater protectionism and state control of the economy, a position held firmly by Primakov and criticized by the IMF. Pessimism over the prospects for Russia to obtain new funds from the IMF or the G-7, assumptions on which the Russian budget is based, led Standard and Poors on February 1 to label Russia's long term foreign currency debt as being in "selective default."
While the Russian budget is a major stumbling block to continued assistance from the IMF, it was compiled in part based on assurances made by Maslyukov that his talks with the IMF were proceeding successfully. Maslyukov came out of a January 14 meeting in Washington with IMF managing director Michel Camdessus, insisting that Russia had not come to the end of the line with the IMF. He later claimed that an IMF delegation, which arrived in Moscow on January 20, had come to resolve final technical differences over the 1999 Russian budget. That story was blown apart by the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta on January 26, when it reported that Maslyukov had lied to Primakov about holding meetings with the visiting IMF delegation. The paper claimed that "over the past two weeks, Maslyukov has been consciously or unconsciously deceiving his own party and the whole country. He does not want to admit the complete failure of his recent visit to IMF headquarters in Washington, and has instead stated several times that Russia still has a good chance of obtaining IMF credit." Maslyukov's spokesman Anton Surikov then announced on January 27 that Maslyukov would not hold a scheduled January 28 meeting with the IMF delegation head as "there is no subject for a talk yet." Furthermore, Surikov claimed that Maslyukov did not feel well, traditionally an ominous sign in Russian politics. But only two days later, Maslyukov claimed that he expected the IMF to release a new loan by May.
The IMF delegation left Moscow on February 6, with no scheduled plans to return, after Russia failed to produce a requested memorandum justifying its economic forecasts. Maslyukov had asked on February 3 for a week to 10 days to finish the document, which Primakov had promised to deliver on February 1 and Maslyukov had already postponed to February 4. By February 5, amid rumors that he could be sacked, Maslyukov admitted that Russia and the IMF were still only "approaching a situation that is understandable to both sides. Yet problems remain, especially about some budget numbers."
Signs of Maslyukov's failure were emerging even before the Nezavisimaya Gazeta article. On January 25, he lashed out at members of the Kirienko government for allegedly sabotaging his efforts. "Members of the previous government are extensively traveling abroad to persuade the West not to lend any money to this government. This is a disgrace," he said in a lecture at Moscow State University.
Maslyukov continues to vacillate wildly between blind optimism over talks with the IMF and assertions that the talks are being sabotaged by Russian reformists. On February 8, the Russian news agency ITAR-TASS cited "participants in the Moscow talks" with the IMF as claiming that the IMF delegation is "inclined to move forward as fast as possible" and is ready to return to Moscow in the near future to continue talks. The report, highly reminiscent of Maslyukov's previous delusions, said that the IMF delegation would return to Moscow "as soon as it receives and studies new proposals of the Russian authorities, on which they have been working very intensively now."
On February 9, Maslyukov told Russia's Interfax news agency that Camdessus could travel to Moscow between February 18 and 20. Maslyukov claimed that an IMF delegation would first arrive to hold talks with Russian specialists for two or three days, after which "we shall invite Camdessus or (first deputy managing director Stanley) Fischer." Maslyukov said that talks with the IMF were "extremely difficult" but claimed "we are moving closer to one another." Additionally, Maslyukov announced that Russia was holding discussions with the West about the possibility of writing off Soviet debts. Maslyukov said that Russia "will not be able to pay off all the debts, and it is important for us that some of them are rescheduled, while some are best written off... The total does not depend on us. For us it is, of course, important that as much as possible (is written off)."
Optimism aside, on February 10, Maslyukov's spokesman, Anton Surikov, told Agence France Presse that U.S. officials were privately pressuring Russia to reverse its positions on a number of foreign policy issues in return for debt relief. "Officially the question was not put," said Surikov, "But unofficially they are seeking changes in Russia's foreign policy stance." Surikov listed a range of issues from changes in the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty to cooperation with Iran, to Moscow's stance on Kosovo, and claimed that, "If we agree, then they will quickly agree to a restructuring of foreign debt." However, Surikov claimed that the U.S. had warned that if Russia did not comply, the Russian government would fall victim to an organized Russian media campaign. "They said the government could come under media pressure. The government would be criticized within the country for not being able to agree with international financial organizations," said Surikov.
Surikov later backed down, stating that the pressure had come from "influential Western analysts" rather than government officials, according to Interfax. That is not to say that the U.S. would not take advantage of Russia's economic distress to attempt to win a few policy concessions. Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov emerged from a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright last month and insisted that, "We are not selling out our national interests." Still, besides demonstrating the degree of frustration, paranoia, and even hysteria enveloping the Russian economic team, Surikov's comments about a threatened media campaign lay the groundwork for a crackdown on Russia's private media, and the handful of wealthy oligarches that control it, as tools of foreign governments.
So now Primakov has allegedly turned to Kirienko. But while this may well reflect his disgust with Maslyukov's abysmal performance, it should not be taken as an embrace by Primakov of Kirienko's liberal reforms. Primakov can not and will not alter Russia's new, Communist-drafted economic policies. Kirienko was driven out by, and Primakov relies on, the communists and nationalists that dominate the Russian Duma. Reform in Russia is dead. And therefore, Kirienko's trip to Germany would only occur out of the vain hope that, since he apparently understands the Western bankers and speaks their language, perhaps he can convince them to accept the Russian budget. The message won't change, but maybe a different messenger can make it more palatable -- a dubious hope.
Commenting on Maslyukov's efforts to date, reformist Boris Fyodorov, who was sacked last August as tax chief and Deputy Prime Minister with the rest of the Kirienko government, said "Talks with the IMF resemble a conversation between the deaf and dumb." But it's not a matter of talking the talk. Kirienko needs to walk the walk, and Primakov can not give him the authority to negotiate. Kirienko is just a politically correct messenger and can do nothing to effect the changes in Russian economic policy necessary to win over the Western bankers. He was sent, not to deal, but to plead. Even Primakov must know this, but he has to give it a shot.
The question is, why would Kirienko be willing to go along with the scheme? He knows he is on what is almost certainly a futile mission. After all, he understands the fundamental reasons why the IMF has rejected Maslyukov's efforts to date, and he has nothing new to offer. Moreover, after having his own reform efforts vehemently rejected by the communists and nationalists who now rule Russia, not to mention the masses of Russians who blame their poverty on Western-oriented reform, Kirienko must know that a failure to win over the IMF will drive the last nail in his political coffin. This is a clever scheme on Primakov's part, throwing final responsibility for Russia's bankruptcy on the reformists. But by the same token, if he does not at least try, and negotiations with the IMF finally collapse, Kirienko knows that any remaining fragments of Russian reform will be destroyed. Kirienko is going to Germany to beg -- for Russia, for reform, for himself. We do not envy him.
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