By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Can Putin
Survive?
As evidenced earlier, the war looks very
different in Putin’s telling than it does in the West. It is just and courageous.
It is successful. “Our warriors of different ethnicities are fighting together,
shielding each other from bullets and shrapnel like brothers,” Putin said.
Russia’s enemies had tried to use “international terrorist gangs” against the
country, but they had “failed.” In reality, Russian troops have been met by
fierce local resistance rather than outpourings of support, and they could not
seize Kyiv and depose Ukraine’s government. But for Putin, victory may be the
only publicly acceptable result in Russia.
However, they are discussed in the West, which has been nearly jubilant
about Ukraine’s success. Russia’s military setbacks have reinvigorated the
transatlantic alliance and, for a moment, made Moscow look like a kleptocratic
third-rate power. Many policymakers and analysts are now dreaming that the
conflict could ultimately end not just in a Ukrainian victory; they are hoping
Putin’s regime will suffer the same fate as the Soviet Union: collapse. This
hope is evident in the many articles and speeches drawing comparisons between
the Soviet Union’s disastrous war in Afghanistan and Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine. It appears to be a latent motivation for the harsh sanctions imposed
on Russia, and it underlines all the recent talk of the democratic world’s new
unity. The war, the logic goes, will sap public support
for the Kremlin as losses mount and sanctions destroy the Russian economy. Cutting from access to
Western goods, markets, and culture, elites and ordinary Russians will grow
increasingly fed up with Putin, perhaps taking to the streets to demand a
better future. Eventually, Putin and his regime may be shunted aside in either
a coup or a wave of mass protests.
This thinking is based on a faulty reading of history. The Soviet Union
did not collapse for these reasons. Westerners like to point to a humiliating
defeat in Afghanistan, military pressure from the United States and Europe,
nationalistic tensions in its constituent republics, and the siren song of
democracy. In reality, it was misguided Soviet economic policies and a series
of political missteps by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
that caused the country to self-destruct. And Putin has learned much from
the Soviet collapse, managing to avoid the financial chaos that doomed the
Soviet state despite intense sanctions. Russia today features a very different
combination of resilience and vulnerability than the one that characterized the
late-era Soviet Union. This history matters because in thinking about the war
in Ukraine and its aftermath, the West should avoid projecting its
misconceptions about the Soviet collapse onto present-day Russia.
The Soviet Union did not
collapse for these reasons. Westerners like to point to.
But that doesn’t mean the West is helpless in shaping Russia’s future.
Putin’s regime is more stable than Gorbachev’s was, but if the West can stay
unified, it may still be able to undermine the Russian president’s power
slowly. Putin grossly miscalculated by
invading Ukraine, and in doing so, he has exposed the regime’s
vulnerabilities—an economy that is much more interdependent with Western
economies than its Soviet predecessor ever was and a highly robust political
system that lacks the tools for political and military mobilization possessed
by the Communist Party. Russia will become a less powerful international act if
the war grinds on. A prolonged invasion may even lead to the kind of chaos that
brought down the Soviet Union. But Western leaders cannot hope for such a
quick, decisive victory. However, there, they will have to deal with an
authoritarian Russi weakened for the foreseeable
future.
Creative destruction
In the United States and Europe, many experts assume that the collapse
of the Soviet Union was preordained. In this narrative, the Soviet Union had
long been fossilized economically and ideologically; it’s militarily
overextended. It took time for the economic flaws and internal contradictions
to tear the state apart. Still, the country began to buckle as the West
increased pressure on the Kremlin through military buildups. And as national
self-determination movements in the constituent republics gained steam, they
began to break. Gorbachev’s attempts at liberalization, well-intentioned as
they were, could not save a dying system.
There is some truth to this story. The Soviet Union could never compete militarily or technologically with the United
States and its allies. Soviet leaders performed Sisyphean labor to catch up
with the West, but their country always lagged. On the battlefield of ideas and
images, Western freedom and prosperity did help accelerate the demise of
communist ideology, as younger Soviet elites lost faith in communism and gained
a keen interest in coveted foreign goods, travel, and Western popular culture.
And the Soviet imperial project certainly faced discontent and disdain from
internal ethnic minorities.
Yet these were not new problems and were not enough to rapidly force
the Communist Party out of power at the end of the 1980s. In China, communist
leaders faced similar crises at roughly the same time. Still, they responded to
rising discontent by liberalizing the Chinese economy and using force to stop
mass protests. This combination—capitalism without democracy—worked, and the
leaders of the Chinese Communist Party now rule
cynically and profit from state capitalism while posing under portraits of
Karl Marx, Vladimir Lenin, and Mao Zedong. Other communist regimes, such as the
one in Vietnam, made similar transitions.
In reality, the Soviet Union was destroyed not so much by its
structural faults but by the Gorbachev-era reform. As the economists Michael
Bernstam, Michael Ellman, and Vladimir Kontorovich
have all argued, perestroika unleashed entrepreneurial energy but not in a way
that created a new market economy and filled shelves for Soviet consumers. Insteadpowerenergy turned out to be destructive.
Soviet-style entrepreneurs hollowed out the state’s economic assets and
exported valuable resources for dollars while paying taxes in rubles. They
siphoned revenues to offshore sites, paving the way for oligarchic kleptocracy.
Commercial banks quickly learned ingenious ways to milk the Soviet state,
leading the central bank to print more and more rubles to cover the commercial
banks’ financial obligations as the government deficit expanded. In 1986 and
1987, as vodka sales and oil prices fell and the country reeled in the wake of
the Chornobyl nuclear disaster, the Ministry of Finance printed only 3.9
billion and 5.9 billion rubles, respectively. But in 1988 and 1989, when
Gorbachev’s reforms were enacted, the injections of ruble liquidity increased
to 11.7 billion and then to 18.3 billion.
It took decades for tens of
millions of former Soviet citizens to develop postimperial identities.
Gorbachev and other reformers plowed ahead anyway. The Soviet leader
delegated more political and economic authority to the 15 republics that
constituted the union. He removed the Communist Party from governance and
authorized elections in each republic for councils vested with legislative and
constitutional authority. Gorbachev’s design was well-meaning, yet it magnified
economic chaos and financial destabilization. Russia and the other republics
withheld two-thirds of the revenues that were supposed to go to the federal
budget, forcing the Soviet finance ministry to print 28.4 billion rubles in
1990. The Soviet ruling class, meanwhile, decomposed into ethnic clans: the
communist elites in the various republics—Kazakhs, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, and
others—began to identify more with their nations
than with the imperial center. Nationalist separatism rose like a flood.
The change of heart was particularly striking in the case of the
Russians. During World War II, the Russians had done most of the fighting on
behalf of the Soviet Union, and many in the West saw the communist empire as a
mere extension of Russia. But in 1990–91, it was primarily tens of millions of
Russians, led by Boris Yeltsin, who tore down the Soviet state. They were an
eclectic group, including liberal-minded intellectuals from Moscow, provincial
Russian apparatchiks, and even KGB and military officers. What united them was
their rejection of Gorbachev and his failing governance. The Soviet leader’s
perceived weakness, in turn, prompted an attempted coup in August 1991. The
organizers put Gorbachev under house arrest and sent tanks into Moscow in hopes
of shocking people into submission, but they failed on both fronts. Instead,
they hesitated to use brutal force and inspired mass protests against the
Kremlin’s control. What followed was the self-destruction of the Soviet Union’s
power structures. Yeltsin pushed Gorbachev aside, banned the Communist Party,
and acted as a sovereign ruler. On December 8, 1991, Yeltsin and the leaders of
Belarus and Ukraine declared that the Soviet Union had “ceased to exist as a
subject of international law and geopolitical reality.”
But without Yeltsin’s declaration, the Soviet Union might have
soldiered on. Even after it ceased, the empire lived for years as a standard
ruble zone with no borders and customs. Post-Soviet states lacked financial independence.
Even after national independence referendums, followed by celebrations of
newfound freedom, it took decades for tens of millions of former Soviet
citizens outside Russia to develop postimperial identities, think and act like
citizens of Belarus, Ukraine, and the other new states. In this sense, the
Soviet Union proved more resilient than brittle. It was no different from other
empires because it took decades, not months, to disintegrate.
Learning from the past
Putin is deeply familiar with this history. The Russian president once
declared that “the demise of the Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical
catastrophe” of the twentieth century, and he has structured his regime to
avoid the same fate. He recognized that Marx and Lenin were wrong about
economics and energetically worked to figure out how Russia could survive and
thrive under global capitalism. He brought in capable economists and made
macroeconomic stability and having a balanced budget among his top priorities.
During the first decade of his rule, soaring oil prices filled Russia’s
coffers, and Putin quickly finished paying back the $130 billion in
debt Russia owed to Western banks. He kept future deficits to a minimum, and
his government began to accumulate reserves in foreign currency and gold. Those
precautions paid off during the global financial crisis of 2008 when Russia
could comfortably bail out corporations vital to its economy (all of which were
run by Putin’s associates).
After Putin annexed Crimea in 2014, the United States imposed sanctions
on Russian oil and other industries, and oil prices plummeted as much as they
did under Gorbachev. But the Russian government reacted skillfully. Under the
leadership of Central Bank Chair Elvira Nabiullina
and Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, the government
allowed the ruble to devalue, restoring macroeconomic stability. After a brief
dip, the Russian economy rebounded. Even during the COVID-19 pandemic, the
country maintained strict fiscal discipline. While Western states printed trillions
of dollars to subsidize their economies, Russia increased its budget surplus.
The government’s economists “are holier than the Pope in applying” the approach
advocated by the International Monetary Fund, said Dmitry Nekrasov, a former
Russian state economist. “During the last ten years, no country in the world
would have conducted such a consistent, conservative, and hard-principled
policy drawn on [a] liberal macroeconomics model.” By 2022, Putin’s state had
accumulated more than $600 billion in financial reserves, one of the
largest stashes in the world.
But for Putin, the primary purpose of this sound financial policymaking
was not to earn international plaudits or even to help ordinary Russians keep
their savings. The point was to bolster his power. Putin used the accumulated
reserves to restore the sinews of the authoritarian state by building up the
security services, expanding Russia’s military and armament industry, and
paying off the head of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, and his paramilitary—another
pillar of the Kremlin’s dictatorship.
Putin energetically worked
to figure out how Russia could thrive under global capitalism.
When Putin decided to invade Ukraine earlier this year, he believed
Russia’s large reserves would allow the country to ride out whatever sanctions.
But the West’s financial response was far harsher than he expected—even ardent
anti-Russian hawks in the West were surprised. The West and its allies cut off
several central Russian banks from SWIFT, the international payment clearing
network. They froze $400 billion in Russian international reserves that were
physically stored in G-7 countries. Washington and its allies also blocked
manufacturing companies from working with the Russian government or businesses.
Over 700 Western manufacturing and retail corporations walked out of Russia on
their own, shamed by public opinion in their home countries. Large international
transportation and financial firms and intermediaries stopped working with
companies linked to Moscow. The decoupling is unlike anything the world has
seen since the blockades of Germany and Japan during World War II.
In the West, these actions were met with euphoria. Pundits declared
that Russia’s currency would collapse and that there would be broad protests.
Some even speculated that Putin could be toppled. But none of those scenarios
came to pass. The ruble initially tanks, but Nabiullina
and Siluanov acted quickly to save it. The Russian
state suspended the currency’s free convertibility. It decreed that 80 percent
of the oil revenue made by Russian companies and other exporters (including
payments made in dollars) had to be sold to the central bank. It banned Russian
citizens from wiring more than $10,000 abroad per month, quashing the panicky
rush to convert rubles to dollars. These currency eventually bounced back to
pre-invasion levels. Had Gorbachev been assisted by such expertise, the Soviet
Union might have survived.
Meanwhile, Russia’s entrepreneurs are learning; meanwhile, Russia
entrepreneurs are learning to adapt to their new reality. Many front doors to
the international economy have shut, but Russia’s businesspeople—including
those who run its arms industry—know how to use backdoors to find what they
need. Russian businesses still enjoy legal access to multiple major economies,
including those of China and India, both of which remain willing to do business
with Russia. There is little economic reason for them not to: the ruble’s
strength makes it profitable to buy Russian energy and other materials at a
discount. The Russian government can tax these profits and enforce their
conversion to rubles, further maintaining the country’s solvency. In the short
term, it is unlikely that the West’s harsh sanctions will kill the ruble and
force the Kremlin to yield.
Divide and conquer
Western penalties may not be shifting Moscow’s thinking. But they are
unmistakably hurting parts of Russia’s population: the country’s elites and the
urban middle class. Governments, universities, and other institutions worldwide
have canceled thousands of scientific and scholarly projects with Russian
researchers. Services woven into the lives of many white-collar Russians—from
Facebook to Netflix to Zoom—are suddenly unavailable. Russians cannot upgrade
their MacBooks or iPhones. It has become challenging for them to get visas to
enter the United Kingdom or the European Union, and even if they succeed, there
are no direct flights or trains that can take them there. They can no longer
use their credit cards abroad or pay for foreign goods and services. Russia’s
invasion has made life quite difficult for the country’s cosmopolitan for the
country’s cosmopolitans.
At first glance, this might seem to bode ill for Putin. During the
Soviet political crisis of 1990–91, members of the middle and upper classes
played a massive role inthe state collapse the state
collapse. Hundreds of thousands of educated Soviets rallied in the main squares
of Moscow and St. Petersburg, demanding change. A new Russian elite that
embraced nationalism and cast itself in opposition to the Soviet old guard,
gained power after elections held in 1990. The country’s knowledge workers and
intelligentsia teamed up with this new elite to help bring the empire down.
But Gorbachev tolerated, and arguably encouraged, such political
activism. Putin does not. Unlike Gorbachev, who allowed opponents to contest
elections, Putin has worked to prevent any Russians from emerging as credible
threats—most recently, by poisoning the opposition leader Alexei Navalny in
August 2020 and then arresting him a year later. There have been no
demonstrations against the war on the scale that Gorbachev allowed, thanks in
no small part to the ruthless efficiency of Russia’s security services. The
enforcers of Putin’s police state have the power and skills needed to suppress
street protests, including intimidation, arrests, and other assorted
punishments, such as hefty fines. And the Russian state is aggressively pushing
to control its people’s minds. In the first days after the invasion, Russia’s
legislature passed laws criminalizing open discussion and disseminating
information about the war. The government forced the country’s independent news
outlets to shut down.
But these are just the most visible tools of Putin’s control system.
Like many other authoritarians, the Russian president has also learned to
exploit economic inequality to establish a firm base of support, leaning into
the differences between what the Russian scholar Natalya Zubarevich
calls “the four Russias.” First, Russia consists of
urbanites in large cities, many of whom work in the postindustrial economy and
are culturally connected to the West. They are the source of most opposition to
Putin and have staged protests against the president. But they constitute just
one-fifth of the population, by Zubarevich’s
estimate. The other three Russias are the residents
of poorer industrial cities, who are nostalgic for the Soviet past; people who
live in declining rural towns; and multiethnic non-Russians in the North
Caucasus (including Chechnya) and southern Siberia. The inhabitants of those
three Russias overwhelmingly support Putin because
they depend on subsidies from the state and because they adhere to traditional
values when it comes to hierarchy, religion, and worldview—the kinds of
cultural positions that Putin has championed in the Kremlin’s imperialist and
nationalist propaganda, which has gone into overdrive since the invasion of
Ukraine began.
Putin, then, doesn’t need to engage in mass repression to keep himself
in command. Indeed, recognizing the seeming futility of opposing the state,
many members of the first Russia who are genuinely fed up with Putin are simply
fleeing the country—a development that Putin openly supports. He has declared
their departure to be “a natural and necessary self-purification of [Russian]
society” from a pro-Western “fifth column.” And so far, the invasion has done
little to erode his support among the other three Russias.
Most members of those groups do not feel connected to the global economy and
are therefore relatively unbothered by Russia’s ex-communication with the West
via sanctions and bans. To maintain these groups’ support, Putin can continue
to subsidize some regions and pour billions into infrastructure and
construction projects.
He can also appeal to their conservative and nostalgic
sentiments—something Gorbachev could never do. Russia’s turbulent history has
led most people to want a strong leader and consolidation of the country—not
democracy, civil rights, and national self-determination. Gorbachev, however,
was no strongman. The Soviet leader was driven by an extraordinarily idealistic
vision and refused to use force to maintain his empire. He mobilized the most
progressive groups of Russian society, above all the intelligentsia and urban
professionals, to help him yank the Soviet Union out of its isolation,
stagnation, and conservative moorings. But in doing so, he lost the support of
the rest of Russia and was forced out of office, leaving behind a legacy of
economic crisis, statelessness, chaos, and secession. The life expectancy of
Russians dropped from 69 years in 1990 to 64.5 years in 1994; for males, the
plunge was from 64 years down to 58 years. Russia’s population declined, and
the country faced food shortages. It is no wonder that many Russians wanted a
strongman like Putin, who promised to protect them from a hostile world and
restore the Russian empire. In the weeks after the invasion of Ukraine, the
Russian people’s knee-jerk reaction was to rally around the tsar, not to accuse
him of unprovoked aggression.
Under pressure
None of this bodes well for Westerners who want Putin’s system to
fall—or for the Ukrainians fighting to defeat the Russian military machine. But
even though the Soviet Union’s collapse may not offer a preview of Russia’s
trajectory, that doesn’t mean the West’s actions will have no impact on the
country’s future. There is a consensus among Western and savvy Russian
economists that, in the long term, the sanctions will cause Russia’s economy to
shrink as supply chain disruptions mount. The country’s transportation and
communications industries are especially vulnerable. Russia’s passenger aircraft,
fastest trains, and most of its automobiles are made in the West, and they are
now cut off from the companies that know how to service and maintain them. Even
official government statistics indicate that the assembly of new cars in Russia
has fallen precipitously—at least partly because Russian factories are cut off
from foreign-made parts. The Russian military-industrial complex may continue
to go on unimpeded for now, but it will eventually face shortages. Western
companies continued to supply Russian arms manufacturers in the past, even
after Russia annexed Crimea. Now, if for ethical reasons alone, they won’t.
The Russian energy sector has largely escaped the penalties, and as
prices soar, it is making more money on exports than it did before the war. But
eventually, energy output will also deteriorate, and the energy sector, too,
will need spare parts and technological upgrades that only the West can
adequately offer. The Russian authorities have admitted that the country’s oil
output declined by 7.5 percent in March and may go down to levels not seen
since 2003. Selling energy is likely also to become a problem, especially if
the European Union can wean itself from Russian oil and gas.
Putin denies that this will happen. At a meeting with the heads of the
energy corporations, he referred to Western sanctions as “chaotic”.” He
asserted that they would hurt Western economies and consumers more than
Russians because of inflation. He even spoke about Europe’s “economic suicide”
and promised to stay ahead of the West’s anti-Russian actions. He has also
convinced himself that the West no longer calls the shots in the global
economy, given the world’s increasing multipolarity. He is not alone; even
Russian economists who oppose Putin are convinced that as long as the country’s
finances are in good shape, the rest of the world—including some Western
companies, traders, and intermediaries—will risk violating the sanctions to do
business with Russia. As the global economy sags under the weight of the war
and as international shock over the invasion fades, they believe Russia’s
relationship with the world will return to normal, just as it did after 2014.
A fall in energy profits
will not undermine the resilience of Putin’s regime.
But the West appears prepared to keep going. One day before Putin
celebrated Victory Day, the G-7 leaders issued a declaration in support of
Ukraine in which they recognized the country as an ally of the West and pledged
financial aid, a steady supply of arms, access to NATO intelligence, and,
critically, continued economic pressure on Russia. The declaration’s key was an
announcement that they would work toward “Russia’s isolation across all sectors
of its economy.” It echoes what Ursula von der Leyen, the head of the European
Commission, described as the EU’s goals: to stop Russian banks “from operating
worldwide,” to “effectively block Russian exports and imports,” and to “make it
impossible for the [Russian] Central Bank to liquidate its assets.”
It won’t be easy to maintain this level of unity, nor will it be easy
to expand the pressure to more of Russia’s sectors—such as by instituting an EU
embargo on Russian oil and gas. Several countries, including Hungary (whose
prime minister, Viktor Orban, remains one of Putin’s
few friends in Europe) and Germany and Italy, are aware that an energy embargo
would considerably blow their economies. And even if Europe institutes an
energy ban, it will not lead to an immediate crisis in Russia. The Soviet
Union, after all, experienced a drastic drop in oil revenues in the late 1980s,
but that is not what bankrupted the country. It was, instead, Gorbachev’s loss
of control over the central bank, the ruble, and the country’s fiscal
mechanisms. As long as Putin retains power over these assets and follows
professional advice, a fall in energy profits will not undermine the resilience
of his regime.
But if the West is serious about stopping Putin, it will have to try to
keep up the pressure anyway. The longer the sanctions go on and the harsher
they grow, the more the West’s anti-Russian economic regime will be implemented
and internalized by other actors in the global economy. States and companies
outside the West will grow more concerned about secondary sanctions. Some
businesses may even worry about their reputations. The Chinese
telecommunications giant Huawei has already suspended new contracts with
Russia. Indian firms that indicated a readiness to buy Russian oil at a 30
percent discount are now under intense pressure to back off.
Only a hardcore determinist can believe that in 1991, there were no
alternatives to the Soviet collapse. If the sanctions regime does drag on and
becomes institutionalized, the West may yet succeed in undermining Putin’s
system. Moscow’s talented economists will eventually become unable to shield
the country from devastating macroeconomic impacts. Even with trillions of
dollars in investment in infrastructure projects or other stimulus measures,
the Russian state will be unable to overcome the effects of exclusion as the
costs of these projects, especially with the accompanying corruption, balloon.
Without foreign know-how, the efficiency of producing Russian goods and their
quality will return to where they were in the early 1990s. The three Russias dependent on the state for their livelihoods will
then acutely feel their country’s growing weakness and isolation in a way that,
for now, they do not. People may even struggle to put food on the table. This
would all seriously undermine Putin’s story: he is the essential leader of a
“sovereign and great Russia,” which has “risen from its knees” under his
tenure.
It is possible to imagine this seriously weakening the Russian state in
the long term. Separatism could rise or return to some regions, such as
Chechnya if the Kremlin stops paying their residents’ bills. Tensions will
generally grow between Moscow—where money is amassed—and the industrial cities
and regions that depend on imports and exports. This is most likely to happen
in Eastern Siberia and the mid-Volga, oil-producing areas that could find
themselves forced to give ever-larger shares of shrinking profits to the
Kremlin.
Still, even a much weaker Russia is not destined to suffer a Soviet
Union-style breakup. National separatism is not nearly as much of a threat to
present-day Russia, where roughly 80 percent of the country’s citizens consider
themselves ethnic Russians as it was to the Soviet Union. Moscow’s repressive
solid institutions could also ensure that Russia does not experience regime
change, or at least not the exact regime change that took place in 1991. And
Russians, even if they turn against the war, would probably not go on another
rampage to destroy their state.
The West should nonetheless stay the course. The sanctions will
gradually drain Russia’s war chest and, with it, the country’s capacity to
fight. Facing mounting battlefield setbacks, the Kremlin may agree to an uneasy
armistice. But the West must also stay realistic. Only a hardcore determinist
can believe that in 1991, there were no alternatives to the Soviet collapse. A
much more logical path for the Soviet state would have been continued
authoritarianism combined with radical market liberalization and prosperity for
select groups—unlike China’s road.
Similarly, it would be deterministic for the West to expect a weakened
Russia to fall. There will at least be a period in which Ukraine and the West
have to coexist with a weakened, humiliated, but still autocratic Russian
state. Western policymakers must prepare for this eventuality rather than
dreaming of collapse in Moscow.
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