Carnegie Moscow Center Carnegie Moscow Center

  • Global Resources

    Global Centers

    • Beijing
      • Home 中文
      • Issues 主题
      • Programs 项目
      • Experts 专家
      • Events 会议
      • Publications 出版物
      Shortcuts
      • For Media
      • Podcasts
      • Window Into China
    • Beirut
      • Home عربي
      • Issues القضايا
      • Regions المناطق
      • Experts الباحثون
      • Events الأنشطة
      • Publications المنشورات
      Shortcuts
      • Sada
      • Capacity Building
      • Syria in Crisis
      • For Media
    • Brussels
      • Home
      • Issues
      • Regions
      • Experts
      • Events
      • Publications
      • Publikationen auf deutsch Publications en français
      Shortcuts
      • Judy Dempsey’s Strategic Europe
      • For Media
    • Moscow
      • Home Главная страница
      • Programs Программы
      • Issues Темы
      • Experts Эксперты
      • Events События
      • Publications Публикации
      Shortcuts
      • For Media
    • New Delhi
      • Home
      • Issues
      • Regions
      • Experts
      • Events
      • Publications
      Shortcuts
      • For Media
      • Video
    • Washington
      • Home
      • Issues
      • Regions
      • Publications
      • Experts
      • Events
      • Programs
      • Projects
      Shortcuts
      • Video
      • Infographics
      • For Media
      • For Government
      • For Academics

    Languages

    • English
      • Experts
      • Publications
      • Events
    • Русский
      • Эксперты
      • Публикации
      • События
    • 中文
      • 专家
      • 出版物
      • 会议
    • عربي
      • الباحثون
      • المنشورات
      • الأنشطة
  • Русский
  • Research
  • Events
  • Experts
  • Issues

Gap Between Moscow and Regions Widens

Source: Getty
Nikolay Petrov Op-Ed July 30, 2012 The Moscow Times
Summary
The Kremlin is implementing counterproductive changes in relations between Moscow and the regions that offer little promise of improving the situation in the country.
Related Topics
  • Society and Regions
  • Putinology
Related Media and Tools
  • Print Page
 

The same authorities who fearfully responded to the anti-government protests in December by proposing a range of political reforms are now carrying out a series of counter-reforms.

While these actions have grabbed the spotlight, little attention has been paid to the fact that the authorities also promised in December to implement reforms to improve relations between Moscow and the regions. In fact, State Council decisions made on July 17 indicate that the backtracking on reforms is even greater in this area than in relations between the government across all of Russia and society.

Nikolay Petrov was the chair of the Carnegie Moscow Center’s Society and Regions Program. Until 2006, he also worked at the Institute of Geography at the Russian Academy of Sciences, where he started to work in 1982.
Nikolay Petrov
Scholar-in-Residence
Society and Regions Program
Moscow Center
More from this author...
  • Putin and the Regions
  • The Russian Awakening
  • Kremlin Filters Will Change in Next Elections
  • Putin’s Political Volcano
The State Council headed by President Dmitry Medvedev in December 2011 differs dramatically in both composition and style from the current State Council headed by President Vladimir Putin.

Medvedev's State Council discussed in December to cede 100 tasks to the regions. By contrast, Putin's State Council opted to cede only a handful of responsibilities to the regions starting in 2013. They include oversight of the environment, food quality, labor legislation, passenger vehicles and forestry.

Under this arrangement, governors will be given carte blanche in establishing the structure and appointing directors of those supervisory agencies. At the same time, Moscow will not provide the regions with the funds to implement these projects. Instead, it will hold the governors personally responsible for the results. If they fail, they could easily be dismissed for unsatisfactory performance.

In a bid to increase their effectiveness, the 200 indicators to evaluate efficiency of regional authorities will be reduced to only 11. A draft of that presidential decree has already been prepared.

There are three main results of these measures:

First, they will lead to a degree of decentralization, but not to refederalization. The Kremlin plans to give the regions responsibility for the physical implementation of a number of burdensome supervisory functions while keeping control over the decision-making process firmly rooted in Moscow. As Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matviyenko rightfully pointed out in December, even if Moscow were to delegate authority to the regions, it could just as easily rescind it, a reality that understandably dampens the enthusiasm of regional authorities.

Rather than using those joint powers as a political football to be handed off and then snatched back depending on the political climate, the regions should be entrusted with certain inalienable powers.

Second, the government's backtracking on promises to provide full financial support for the powers and responsibilities it transfers to the regions is reminiscent of attempts in 2004 to reform the monetization of benefits. Then, too, the authorities managed to quickly override objections from the regions, but they paid a high price for it in the process.

Finally, however much Medvedev was only a weak figurehead as president, there remains a striking contrast between the functioning of his State Council and that of Putin's. At least Medvedev's сouncil discussed and planned for federalist reforms, even if it never implemented them. By contrast, Putin angrily reacts to any hint at concessions to reformers and takes pains to avoid even the use of the word "elections," preferring to speak of "a new method for bringing governors into office."

The next few years will be marked by two general trends: changes in the relationship between the government and society and between Moscow and the regions. It seems the Kremlin is determined to defy logic by working against progress and by implementing counterproductive measures that offer little promise of improving the situation in the country.

This article originally appeared in The Moscow Times.

End of document
 
Source http://carnegie.ru/2012/07/30/gap-between-moscow-and-regions-widens/eqe7

More from The Global Think Tank

  • Publications
  • Events
  • The Moscow Times
    Don't Expect an October Revolution
  • The Moscow Times
    Senator Reform Just Plain Bad
  • The False Promise of Russia’s New Far East Ministry
  • The Moscow Times
    Expect Fewer Bland Apparatchiks
  • The Moscow Times
    The Kremlin's Filter Facade
  • Moscow
    Irregular Triangle: State-Business-Society Relations in Russia’s Regions
Twitter
@CarnegieRussia

Sign up for Carnegie Email

 
  • Connect With Us
  • Support The Global Think Tank
 
Carnegie Moscow Center
 
Please note...

You are leaving the Carnegie–Tsinghua Center for Global Policy's website and entering another Carnegie global site.

请注意...

你将离开清华—卡内基中心网站,进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站。