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- Russian History
- Consolidation of Democracy in Post-Soviet Russia
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-
- Introduction
- The fall of the Communist regime in the Soviet Union was more than a political event. The powerful
- interaction and fusion between politics and economics that characterized the state socialist system created
- a situation that was unique for the successor states of the Soviet Union. The penetration of the
- Communist regime into every facet of life left the Russian people with little democratic traditions. Russia
- faces the seemingly impracticable task of economic liberalization and democratization. This is combined
- with a necessity to answer nationalist and ethnic questions that have plagued Russia for centuries.
- This paper addresses the problems of creating a stable democracy in Russia. The prospects for a stable
- democracy in Russia are limited at best. I will outline some of the concerns that academics have in the
- consolidation of Russian democracy. What is paramount to note is that a stable democracy must
- adequately address what Ken Jowitt calls the ôdevelopmental trinityö: nation-building; capitalism and
- democracy. The dilemma that is especially relevant to Russia it that these conditions are often
- contradictory. The often messy business of politically reconstructing a nation defies traditional
- democratic ideals. The establishment of democratic institutions can hinder the development of a market
- economy and, conversely, programs that are designed to enhance capitalist expansion often are
- antagonistic towards democratic goals (Jowitt 7). These seemingly endless Catch-22Æs are at the heart of
- difficulties facing Russia in its attempt to create a stable democracy.
- The Process of Creating A Nation-State
- The question of who is the playing the game and what makes the playing field is an important one for the
- Russian Federation. Ethnic and nationalist questions plagued the Soviet Union and continue to stress the
- Russia Federation during its nascent period. The dynamics of center-periphery relations provides Moscow
- with some of the greatest challenges in establishing a stable democracy. Phillipe Smitter writes, ôThere is
- no simply democratic way of deciding what a nation and its corresponding political unit should beö
- (Smitter 66). Later in his article, he writes ôthose that have not yet resolved the dilemma of defining their
- national and territorial boundaries are unlikely to make much more progress in other domainsö (Smitter
- 73). The dilemma facing the Russian Federation is that it finds itself with a charge of establishing and
- following democratic institutions, while at the same time facing secessionary pressures that seem to
- require extra-democratic means to preserve the integrity of the nation.
- Nationalism in multiethnic areas in the Russian Federation has provided a substantial challenge for
- democratization. There is a direct relationship between democratization and ethnic peace (Smitter 72). In
- a democratically weak society, ethnicity assumes a stronger role, and when democracy and ethnicity are
- balanced, political stability is possible. As a result of a lack of democratic institutions and channels for
- dialogue, RussiaÆs inhabitants are now increasingly identifying themselves as members of ethnic groups
- rather than as citizens of the Russian Federation (Drobizheva).
- An important development in center-periphery relations is the growing importance of ôeconomic
- nationalism,ö an effort to create an economic basis for political independence. Economic nationalism is a
- protective defense against the Russian federal governmentÆs economic dominance. Alternatively, it is also
- a sign that the republics wish to retain relations with Moscow since politics remains primarily in the
- hands of the center (Drobizheva).
- For example, Tatarstan and Sakha-Yakutia both have a wealth of natural resources, giving them a
- potential advantage in economic development and a desire to establish control over these resources.
- Tatarstan, for example, strives to sell its oil at world market prices in foreign markets to generate income,
- and in 1993-94, the local governments in Tatarstan and Yakutia sought economic decentralization in
- Russia by refusing to pay federal taxes. Consequently, an agreement reached between the federal
- government and the republics gave the latter what they wanted: increased economic autonomy
- (Drobizheva).
- Further inquiry into the agreements with Tartarsan demonstrates the flexibility the Yeltsin regime is
- willing to employ in dealing with possible powder-keg situations. A treaty signed on February 15, 1994
- attempted to mollify the tensions on both sides. The treaty affirmed Tartarsan right to its own
- ôinternational and economic relationsö and, as previously noted, provided substantial autonomy in
- economic issues for Tartarsan. Smoothing over contradictions in each stateÆs constitution, the agreement
- affirms the union between Russia and Tartarsan (Lapidus 107). The treaty with Tartarsan provides a
- possible blueprint for future center-periphery relations. It forebears a evolving and fluid approach that
- should be beneficial in establishing a stable democracy. But in typical Yeltsin contradictory manner, the
- war in Chechnya has demonstrated the worst of the Yeltsin regime.
- The conflict between Chechnya and the Russian Federation should not be considered an ethnic conflict.
- The authorities did not even give as a pretext for the invasion the defense of Russian-speaking people.
- Such a pretext would have been unbelievable, in light of the fact that Russian- speaking people suffered
- from the bombing of Grozny at least as much as the native population. The war was connected more with
- the struggle for power in Moscow than with either economic or ethnic factors. The Chechnyan campaign
- was characterized by Yeltsin employing Soviet-era coercive measures. Paternalism, clientelism, and
- military intervention prevailed over legal methods and legal institutions. Lilia Shevtsova considers the
- Chechnyan war a byproduct of the Yeltsin regimeÆs reliance on personal politics. She writes
- ôYeltsin saw the war as a chance to flex his muscles...neutralize
- the conflicts within his own regime; expand his political base...and
- appear before the world...as a strong leaderö (Shevtsova 67).
- The tragedy in Chechnya not withstanding, and with all due concern towards the dangerous tensions that
- exist between Moscow and it various ethnic republics, I agree with Gail Lapidus and Edward Walker that
- it is unlikely that we will see a significant secession movement in the Russian Federation in the near
- future. Of paramount importance is the economic and political realities facing both Moscow and the
- various republics. Secession provides the republics with a myriad of additional stumbling blocks towards
- establishment of stable democracy. These include questions of international recognition, Russian
- implemented economic pressures, and devastating civil war (Lapidus 108). The costs of leaving the
- Federation would appear to outweigh any perceivable benefits gained by secession.
- Yet there are serious nationalist and regionalist concerns that the Russian Federation must address if there
- is a chance for democracy to take hold. Economic chaos must be avoided by establishing a sound currency
- and creating a common economic bond between the center and the periphery (Lapidus 108). There will
- be a deeper examination into the economic issues facing the Federation as a whole in the next section, but
- note that these concerns are magnified in the peripheral areas that lack developed agricultural and
- industrial economies. Issues of more effective regional and ethnic political representation must be
- addressed through a movement away from the Soviet system that unfairly distributes economic control and
- political power among ethnicities and nationalities (Lapidus 96). Many ethnic minorities lack
- administrative recognition for seemingly arbitrary reasons. It would appear that the best antidote for
- ethnic and national ills is a healthy economy that would bind the periphery to the center, therefore making
- secession an unattractive option. Along with sensible economic reforms, political restructuring is
- essential for stable democracy to take hold.
- The Road to a Market Economy
- At the heart of the difficulties plaguing the Russian Federation are the economic reforms that the Yeltsin
- regime has imposed upon the Russian people. Capitalism is viewed as a necessary ingredient (though not
- sufficient) contingency of a stable democracy. All established democracies are located in countries that
- place economic manufacture and aggregation in the hands of privately owned firms, with distribution of
- scarce resource achieved through market forces (Smitter 66). The movement away from the penetrative,
- all-encompassing Soviet economic octopus has caused enormous hardships for the Russian people. It has
- placed economic uncertainties in the path of political realities, resulting in policies that attempt to address
- the often contradictory objectives of economic liberalization in the wake of political democratization.
- Sweeping in after the failed coup of August 1991, economic reformers, led by Prime Minister Egor
- Gaidar, placed the Russian economy on a steady diet of economic shock therapy. The governmentÆs
- misguided attempt to rest its reform program on fulfillment of a limited number of macroeconomic
- variables left the Russian economy in disarray. Despite a precipitous decline in economic productivity,
- radical reformers defended their macroeconomic policy, arguing that the supply side of the Russian
- economy would receive proper attention after stabilization. But what were the Russians to do in the
- meantime? The revolutionary fervor that characterized the early economic reforms did not take into
- account the punitive realities of their policies. As Steven Fish writes:
- ôAll had advocated ætransition to a market economy.Æ But this goal had been more of a dream than a
- demand, and few had actually considered how to achieve it (Fish 215).
- With all due deference to clichΘ, the early Russian economic policies can be succinctly summarized in
- ôBe careful what you wish for; you might just get it.ö
- Khrushchev stated that a country may follow its own road to socialism, and in a perverse sense that logic
- is still be applicable for Russian affairs. But, rather the mandate should be that each country should
- follow its own road towards capitalism. An examination of what the Communist apparatus left in its
- wake should cause pause for any free-market optimist. Seventy plus years of state socialism has left
- Russia with a two-ton gorilla on its collective economic back.
- On page 66 and 67 of his ôDangers And Dilemmas of Democracyö, Smitter outlines possible starting
- scenarios for incipient democracies. A best case scenario finds the nation with a preceding autocracy that
- had already concentrated profits, encouraged the private accumulation of wealth, increased the stateÆs
- fiscal capacity, invested in the countryÆs physical infrastructure and provided a positive starting point for
- international trade. Countries, such as Chile and Spain, that had inherited these elements, found the
- transition to a market economy easier.
- Russia and the other successor states to the Soviet Union found themselves in a much more precarious
- predicament. The state socialist regime left a legacy of corruption, protectionism, price distortions,
- foreign indebtedness, inefficient public enterprises, trade imbalances, and fiscal instability (Smitter 67).
- Combined with the simultaneous need for political reform, Russia faces a tall task indeed. The dubious
- tradition of the Soviet era has led to an overdependence on foreign advise and models of capitalism.
- Yet, it is clear that this may not be a wise path to follow. Much of the literature concerning post-
- communist literature warns of Russia relying to closely to the Western model of capitalism. Jowitt warns
- that Americans should temper their ômissionary zealö in exporting an idealistic view of ôwhat we once
- wereö (Jowitt 7). The simultaneous difficulties of nation-building, marketization, and democratization
- place the Soviet successor states in a unique and precarious situation.
- Privatization in Russia did occur extraordinarily rapidly, with the idea being that getting productive assets
- into private hands as fast as possible would make economic reform irreversible. This was arguably right -
- there is indeed a large and powerful group that has a great deal to lose from any effort to re-nationalize
- the economy. But this class is at the same time decidedly not interested in fair rules of market competition
- and an open economy. Rather it wants the state to preserve its privileges, protect its markets, and allow it
- to continue to reap the windfall gains of privatization. And neither does it seem to care much about
- democracy.
- At the same time, privatization has contributed greatly to the popular conviction that marketization has
- been deeply unjust: state assets were distributed disproportionately to insiders, to people willing to skirt
- the letter of the law, and in many cases to outright criminals. Official corruption and the lack of fair and
- enforced laws and clearly-defined property rights, have only contributed to this perception. As a result,
- while there is a growing middle class in Russia, it is smaller, less democratic in orientation, and less
- politically influential than it might have been without the state socialist tradition.
- The greatest misstep the Yeltsin regime took was moving forward with economic reform without
- addressing the need for wholesale, political renovation. There is a serious quandary that results in
- concurrent democratization and marketization. It derives from the basic difference between a government
- that strives to distribute power and status relatively equally (democratization) and an economy that
- distributes property and income relatively unequally (capitalism) (Smitter 67). This obstacle is magnified
- in Russian democratization with the fusion between politics and economics. Shevtsova writes ôreformers
- cannot rest content with a rearrangement of relations among different institutions, but must strive to form
- new political and economic systemö (Shevstova 57).
- Democratization and the Reinvention of Russian Government
- An orderly exit from the Soviet past and progress towards stable democracy necessitates the development
- of a state capable of effective governance. Tsarism and state socialism have provided Russians with little
- experience with working governmental institutions, nor knowledge of how to coordinate the actions of
- state agencies in pursuit of a common goal. As especially was the case with the early Gaidar economic
- reforms, political compromise and coalition building were ignored in favor of policies designed for the
- ôpublic good.ö The continued employment of Soviet-style politics by the Yeltsin regime bodes ill for the
- establishment of consolidated democracy in Russia.
- To begin the movement to a consolidated democracy, Russian government most promote new institutional
- capacities and move towards more rational and pragmatic linkages between formal administrative
- agencies and their functions. This is a sharp break away from bureaucratic malaise that characterized the
- Soviet system. Important in this development is the fostering of economic movements outside the old
- system (Shevtsova 56).
- Shevtsova raises an interesting question of whether the ôcollapseö of communism actually strengthened
- the hand of the nomenklatura , especially on the regional and local level, by allowing them to gain a novel
- claim of legitimacy as the leaders of new nations (Shevtsova 60). Along with this new found legitimacy
- came access to the new found economic resources. It is of foremost importance that wealth not be
- distributed solely among a small group of state officials and enterprise directors. Such actions could lead
- to a continuation of patron-client and personalist relations that characterized the state socialist system.
- But the separation between the public and private sphere is not clearly defined in Russian society. The
- penetration and coerciveness of the Communist Party dulled the line between state and civil society. In
- order to consolidate and strengthen the budding private sector, Russia needs to create an administrative
- system that actively encourages its growth. Note my use of the word ôactively.ö. Laissez faire policies are
- not what the private sector needs to grow and develop into a true bourgeoisie. A true bourgeoisie in the
- sense that economic opportunity and success is not achieved by simply being a former member of the
- nomenklatura. But recent improvements show that the distribution of wealth is becoming more equitable.
- Recent improvements in the privatization process, especially in dwellings, hold great promise for the
- expansion of small-scale property ownership; an important step in consolidating private ownership. This
- is along with a growing entrepreneurial spirit among less advantaged segments of the population,
- especially the young (Fish 234).
- To allow a government to actively encourage private, economic enterprise, political appointments must
- move above the personal level. There must be a balance between the administrative and political roles of
- the members of the bureaucracy. Shevstova writes on page 69 that Yeltsin ôhas a habit of ranking
- personal loyalty to himself far above professionalism when choosing appointees and subordinates.ö The
- clientelism of the Soviet era is alive and kicking in the Yeltsin government. To challenge this system, a
- professional bureaucracy, one that is limited in its ability to intervene directly in the policy-making
- process, must develop.
- Another important component of democratization that Shevstova feels is missing from the current Yeltsin
- administration is a lack of imperatives to build broad consensus and foster genuine communication
- between leaders and citizens at large (Shevstova 57). Much of this can be attributed to the Communist
- tradition that placed enormous authority in the local ministers. The autarkic, socialist system allowed
- executive agencies to acquire many legislative functions. Communication with constituents and
- consensus building was a unnecessary hassle. The real conflict existed within the decision-making elite.
- As we will see later, elite conflict is still a major ingredient in the Yeltsin formula of power consolidation.
- Shevstova call this lack of consensus building and communication a hangover from Leninism (Shevstova
- 57). Political power was restricted to a self-selected elite which iniated new personnel less for their
- technical skills than their willingness to embrace Communist ideology or their relationship to powerful
- party elites. This system of clientelism retarded and made irrelevant any development of modern,
- responsive bureaucratic institutional arrangements. Consequently, todayÆs bureaucrats (and yesterdayÆs
- communists) find it difficult to appreciate the need for compromise, power sharing, and local initiative.
- This is precisely the problem Russia faces with Yeltsin. It is painfully apparent from his tenure as the
- architect of Russia early transition period, that old habits die hard.
- Yeltsin: Presidential Power and His Communist Tradition
- A brief look at the Boris Yeltsin biographical sketch shows that he is truly a maverick who, on the eve of
- OlÆ Blue Eyes birthday (Sinatra that is; I think Yeltsin also has blue eyes), ôdid it his way.ö Rising
- through the nomenklatura , gaining a reputation as a fearless reformer, Yeltsin found himself as a
- member of the Politburo. Once again, Yeltsin proved an able and determined reformer, but an
- estrangement between himself and Gorbachev set in when Yeltsin began criticizing the slow pace of
- reform at party meetings, challenging party conservatives and even criticizing Gorbachev himself. Yeltsin
- was forced to resign in disgrace from the Moscow party leadership in 1987 and from the Politburo in
- 1988. His Lazarus act is well documented. Just as well documented his tendency to become a political
- chameleon, changing his colors to suit any political condition. He has been a communist boss, a reformer
- within the communist system, a liberal slayer of communism and a nationalist warrior against
- secessionism (Shevstova 69). While the American president may wear many hats, Yeltsin has traded in
- his entire wardrobe numerous times over. He is truly a skilled political in-fighter, maneuvers he learned
- from his Communist political education.
- Lilia Shevstova is ardently critical of the decisions Yeltsin has made in the post-Soviet era. She lays
- much of the responsibility for the politics of confrontation squarely at the feet of Yeltsin and his advisors
- (Shevstova 58).
- First, she debunks the idea that Yeltsin is a ôdestroyer of the old system. Correctly, she considers him a
- reformer who has not attempted to address the institutional hegemony held by the former nomenklatura .
- His policies have resulted in the concentration of political and economic power in the hands of the former
- communist elites. And she lists a number of Soviet era tactics, such as playing the members of
- nomenklatura against one another, that still personify Yeltsin decision making (Shevstova 60). Yeltsin
- still digs deep into his Communist bag of tricks when trying to consolidate his power.
- The Presidential Revolution of 1993 signified a turn towards a more personalistic brand of rule for Russia.
- Shevstova argues, and I would agree, that the Constitutional Crisis of 1993 was largely predicated on
- Yeltsin attempting to outmaneuver his old Communist rivals, who had taken refuge in the legislature
- (Shevstova 62). The supporters that Yeltsin lined up behind him for this insurgency upon the Supreme
- Soviet were wildly divergent in their political orientations and goals. They included liberal reformers,
- bureaucrats and pragmatists, statists and security officials, and extreme nationalists (Shevstova 63). This
- motley crew testifies to the bizarre landscape that makes up Russian politics.
- Yet it is that bizarre political landscape that Yeltsin appears to be most comfortable operating upon.
- Yeltsin can consolidate and maintain authority because of the lingering sense of crisis that hangs over
- Russian politics (Shevstova 65). The widely held belief that a successor would be a worse option and an
- absence of any real alternatives has allowed Yeltsin to maneuver with impunity. The June presidential
- elections present a clear example of this phenomenon. Even with horrendous economic and political
- performance, Yeltsin still was able to defeat Zhyguanov, for the reason that the challenger was the pits, a
- tired political retread. Shevstova refers to ôthe fear, inertia, and disorientation that pervade Russiaö
- (Shevstova 65). Yeltsin has adeptly used these pathologies to create a system that Shevstova refers to as
- ôdivide and conquerö (Shevstova 69).
- So what are the dangers in YeltsinÆs brand of governing? There has been very little change in how things
- are done under the Yeltsin regime versus the Gorbachev regime. The specific issues were addressed in the
- previous section. Another important point to note is that there has been too much reliance on YeltsinÆs
- personal prestige and charisma (Shevstova 64). Yeltsin operates outside of the nascent party system
- because parties constrain leaders. He is not an institution builder but, as his policies have demonstrated,
- he is a populist. His communist background has not made him adverse to resorting to extra-legal means
- to achieving his goals. It is this procedural uncertainty, and reliance upon the ômanö and not the
- ômeasuresö, that create the greatest concern for the establishment of stable democracy.
- The Crystal Ball
- The problems that I have outlined in this paper do not bode well for the establishment of a stable
- democracy in Russia for the near future. The literature on the subject contends that consolidated
- democracy is not a likely option for Russia. Instead we are much more likely to see a ôunconsolidatedö
- democracy take hold in Russia.
- Fish describes an unconsolidated democracy as a system that would include many of the basic elements of
- democracy, such as elections and considerable civil and cultural freedoms (Fish 226). Yet we are unlikely
- to see the establishment of durable and stable rules and institutions that are appropriate to their respective
- social structures or accepted by their respective citizenries (Smitter 60). Because of the lack of any
- credible alternatives to democracy, we are unlikely to see a regression back to authoritarianism. Yet if
- appropriate reforms are not enacted, we are likely to see what is referred to as democracy by default
- (Smitter 60). The basic rights of democracy will exist but ôregular, acceptable, and predictable
- democratic patterns never quite crystallizeö (Smitter 61). The 1993 Constitution excaberates this problem
- by placing enormous power in the hands of the president, laying the groundwork for discretionary,
- personal expressions of authority that contradict the needed objectives of broad based political
- aggregation.
- There has been growing disenchantment in Russia with the not only Yeltsin, the politician, but with the
- institution of democracy itself. Public opinion show that most Russians evaluate democracy in negative
- terms (Whitefield). This is the danger of having a politician also represent a movement. For a stable
- democracy to take hold in Russia, Yeltsin and future presidents must not become institutions themselves.
- The personalization of transition politics presents enormous difficulties by hampering the
- institutionalization of necessary reforms.
- Still, with all these problems that have been outlined, I feel that it is unlikely that we will see a return to
- authoritarianism. Lilia Shevtsova concludes:
- ôDespite the shallowness of democracyÆs roots and the continuous attempts by some in power to curtail
- freedom, the obstacles to the establishment of a full blow authoritarian regime appear insurmountable.
- There are just too many active and self-conscious interest groups, too many people who have become
- accustomed to life in a relatively free atmosphere, too many competing elites, no united and effective
- bureaucracy, and a military establishment that seems highly unlikely to rally behind any would be man on
- horsebackö (Shevtsova 70).
-
- The character of the next regime will provide many clues to what the future of Russia might be.
- Economic transformations are not sufficient conditions for the consolidation of democracy. I am not
- optimistic that Yeltsin has either the proclivity or the longevity to engage in any sort of meaningful
- political reform. If the next regime does not adequately address what, Smitter referred to as, the extrinsic
- dilemmas facing Russia, then consolidation is very unlikely. These dilemmas include political graft,
- privileged treatment of the elite, unequal distribution of wealth, and crime (Smitter 73). If they are not
- dealt with the future of democracy will be bleak, indeed.
-
- Works Cited
-
-
- Drobizheva , Leokadia. "Democratization and Nationalism in the Russian Federation." Sponsored by the
- Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies: Presented on February 8 1996.
-
- Fish, Stephen. Democracy From Scratch: Opposition and Regime in the New Russian Revolution .
- (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995).
-
- Jowitt, Kenneth. ôDizzy With Democracy.ö Problems of Post Communism, 1 (Jan-Feb, 1996) :
- 3-8.
-
- Lapidus, Gail and Edward Walker. ôNationalism, Regionalism, and Federalism: Center
- Periphery Relations in Post Communist Russia.ö In Lapidus, ed., The New Russia. (Boulder:
- Westview Press, 1995): 79-113.
-
- Shevtsova, Lilia. ôThe Two Sides of The New Russia.ö Journal of Democracy. 6 (July 1995): 41-55.
-
- Smitter, Phillipe C. ôDangers And Dilemmas Of Democracy.ö Journal of Democracy,
- 5 (April 1994): 57-74.
-
- Whitefield, Stephen and Geoffrey Evans. ôThe Popular Basis of Anti-Reform Politics on Russia.ö
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