TY - JOUR
T1 - Russia after the global financial crisis
AU - Gaddy, Clifford
AU - Ickes, Barry
N1 - Funding Information:
20036-2103 ([email protected]), and Professor and Acting Head, Department of Economics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802 ([email protected]). The authors are grateful for financial support from the Human Capital Foundation to the Center for Research on International Financial and Energy Security (CRIFES, www.crifes.psu.edu), where Ickes is Director and Gaddy is Senior Scientific Fellow. They also thank the Smith Richardson Foundation for financial support.
PY - 2010/5/1
Y1 - 2010/5/1
N2 - Two prominent American specialists on the Russian economy present a fundamental analysis of basic economic factors explaining how the global financial crisis has played out in Russia and its implications for the country's future. More specifically, the authors examine the consequences of Russia's dependence on and addiction to resource (oil and gas) rents and of the management system put in place under Vladimir Putin to maintain, secure, and distribute these rents. They then investigate how each of these factors has emerged from the crisis and how it might evolve in the years ahead. Focusing on the distinction between rent dependence and addiction, the authors question the conventional wisdom that diversification of Russia's economy (away from oil and gas) is a desirable objective that will render it less vulnerable to external shocks.
AB - Two prominent American specialists on the Russian economy present a fundamental analysis of basic economic factors explaining how the global financial crisis has played out in Russia and its implications for the country's future. More specifically, the authors examine the consequences of Russia's dependence on and addiction to resource (oil and gas) rents and of the management system put in place under Vladimir Putin to maintain, secure, and distribute these rents. They then investigate how each of these factors has emerged from the crisis and how it might evolve in the years ahead. Focusing on the distinction between rent dependence and addiction, the authors question the conventional wisdom that diversification of Russia's economy (away from oil and gas) is a desirable objective that will render it less vulnerable to external shocks.
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U2 - 10.2747/1539-7216.51.3.281
DO - 10.2747/1539-7216.51.3.281
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77951754394
SN - 1538-7216
VL - 51
SP - 281
EP - 311
JO - Eurasian Geography and Economics
JF - Eurasian Geography and Economics
IS - 3
ER -