Russia's New
Anti-Corruption Campaign Will Sink the Regime
By Ivan
Krastev and Vladislav Inozemtsev
This
spring has been almost eerily calm in Russia. The protest movement, which
coalesced after the rigged parliamentary elections in the autumn of 2011, has
all but disintegrated, and hopes for substantive political opening have faded.
High-profile liberals are in retreat or retirement, a dozen opposition
activists are in jail, and President Vladimir Putin’s will is unchallenged.
Even the weather has been nice, perhaps lulling the Kremlin into believing that
it has little to fear. In fact, it does: unwittingly, Putin’s recent
anti-corruption campaign has set the stage for the system’s collapse.
The
anti-corruption campaign was a choice. In April, the lower house of the Russian
legislature passed a law that bans members of both houses from holding foreign
bank accounts. The prohibition was extended to include all public servants,
including central bank officials and functionaries of state-owned corporations.
Three months after Putin signs the law, government officials will be barred
from opening bank accounts abroad, even to pay for educational or medical
expenses.
Putin
has pledged that this is only the beginning. He and his advisers know well that
attacks on corruption are popular with the public. They are counting on the
campaign to shore up support after the protests and to mobilize Putin’s
supporters. What the Kremlin is neglecting, however, is that the campaign could
be a double-edged sword that ultimately delegitimizes the regime, as Putin’s
own acolytes are swept out while the government’s house is cleaned.
Putin
faces a critical moment and is at risk of losing his sway over the elites.
FROM
GORBACHEV TO PUTIN
The
fate of Mikhail Gorbachev’s anti-alcohol campaign in the last years of the
Soviet Union should have provided a warning. By the 1980s, alcohol had become a
major cause of death, absenteeism, and low labor productivity in the country.
Its cost to the Soviet economy totaled no less than 10 percent of national
income. When Gorbachev launched a program to end alcoholism in 1985, he was
celebrated across the country for his courage and strategic vision. The campaign
did succeed in reducing alcohol consumption, but that didn't stop it from
quickly becoming a political disaster. Ordinary Soviet citizens believed that
drinking themselves to death was their right, and they actively resisted the
state’s attempt to infringe upon it. They ridiculed the policy, disobeyed
regulations, and made their own alcohol. These low-risk forms of everyday
resistance were an enormous problem for Gorbachev, because they turned the
people against the Communist Party. By the time the anti-alcohol campaign was
abandoned at the end of 1987, it had severely damaged both the credibility of
Gorbachev’s reforms and the Soviet leader’s popularity.
Putin’s
anti-corruption effort could very well suffer a similar fate. Today, he faces
his own rights-based problem: Russian elites believe that they are entitled to
rob the country blind. Indeed, it is an essential part of their informal
contract with Putin. They are so convinced of the sanctity of this bargain that
they are ready to oppose the anti-corruption effort tooth and nail. Several
Russian businessmen have already resigned from the senate in order to keep
their foreign bank accounts. Others have tried to hide their money better. In
the next two or three years, the anti-corruption campaign could puncture the
myth of Putin’s power in the same way that Gorbachev’s abortive anti-alcohol
campaign laid bare the weaknesses of the Communist Party.
Making
things all the worse for the elites, the campaign came as a complete surprise
to them. Throughout his time in power, Putin has been careful never to cross
the elites or to raise society’s hackles about them. In fact, the family of
former Russian President Boris Yeltsin buoyed Putin to power expressly to
forestall any push to fight high-level political corruption and revisit the
outcomes of his unpopular privatization policy. So when Putin has clamped down
against graft -- most notoriously in the case of the jailed former oligarch
Mikhail Khodorkovsky -- he has limited himself to precision strikes against
well-known targets. During the days in which Putin governed Russia in tandem
with then President Dmitry Medvedev, corruption was treated mostly as an
institutional issue to be cured by the market, not by the courts. Between 2009
and 2012, the number of corrupt Russian officials sentenced in court was nearly
halved, from 10,700 to 5,500.
Putin’s
reasoning was all very simple: in his nightmares, he saw elite-led unrest in
Russia’s far-flung regions and infighting among the Moscow elite bringing down
his regime. The traumatic fragmentation of the 1990s haunted him. Demurring on
corruption, he believed, was key to exerting control -- or at least buying it
from elites. To provide enough patronage to go around, he dramatically
increased the size of the bureaucracy. From 2000 to 2012, the number of state
officials increased by more than 65 percent -- from 1.3 million to 2.1 million.
And the number of security personnel in Russia, excluding the military, reached
2.3 million. Corrupt state officials have become the most important support
group for the regime. So instead of reducing the corrupt bureaucracy or purging
it, Putin decided to enlarge it. In the 1990s, business captured the state in
Russia; after Putin’s ascendance, the state captured business. No longer was it
necessary for a businessperson to bribe a state official in order to procure a
government contract: in most cases, it would be the state official’s wife,
lover, or partner who would win the deal.
Making
corruption from above seem normal, and matching it with ever-present petty
corruption from below, was also a key element of the message that was at the
heart of Putin’s regime: namely, that there were no alternatives. Indeed,
surveys reveal that support for the regime derives not from those who believe
that corruption is not a problem -- that segment of the population is fairly
miniscule -- but from those who agree that nothing can be done about it. It is
easy to understand why: currently, approximately $300 billion -- or 16 percent
of Russia’s GDP -- has been eaten up by corruption. In general, the costs of
state investment projects exceed original es¬timates by anywhere from 250 to
400 percent.
THE
NAVALNY FACTOR
Why,
then, did Putin bet the farm on an anti-corruption effort? The answers are
surprisingly straightforward: a sluggish economy, political pressure created by
a lawyer-blogger named Alexei Navalny, and, finally, a sense of betrayal.
First,
in the wake of the financial crisis, Putin’s ability to deliver on earlier
promises has diminished; to secure social harmony, Moscow has dramatically
increased its budgetary spending, even if most of that money is either wasted
or stolen. Economists claim that the cost of organizing the Winter Olympics in
2014 will be as high as the cost of organizing the games of 1994, 1998, 2002,
2006, and 2010 combi¬ned. Putin’s bureaucracy has become not only too expensive
but also, as the Moscow protests demonstrated, incapable of ensuring political
stability. So, more than ever before, the regime’s stability depends on its
ability to improve the real incomes of ordinary Russians, and reducing
corruption is the most obvious way -- but as Putin will learn, also the most
politically risky way -- to increase government revenue.
In
addition, Putin knows that Alexei Navalny, who became Russia’s most popular
opposition leader after the protests of 2011, is an opponent to be taken
seriously. It was only Moscow’s middle class that demanded “Russia without
Putin,” but Navalny’s anti-corruption message resonated outside the capital. Most
Russians endorsed his claim that the governing United Russia party was “a party
of crooks and thieves.” Opinion polls indicate that, by 2010, state officials,
not the oligarchs, had become the poster children for corruption. And while
Navalny titillated citizens with the hope that one day he could become
president, Putin wholesale adopted Navalny’s role as white knight of the
corruption fight. He has tried to position himself as a man of anti-corruption
actions, not simply of anti-corruption talk. (Of course, Navalny himself will
probably be put in prison on a charge of -- what else? -- corruption.)
The
reluctance of the Russian elites to join the Kremlin’s anti-Western hysteria in
the wake of the Moscow protests was another factor that encouraged Putin to
confront corruption. The elites’ disinclination to confront the West indicated
to Putin that corruption is a veritable instrument of control but that he does
not have a monopoly on wielding it. After all, Russian elites may be loyal to
Putin, but they have insured themselves in the West. It is hardly surprising
that those who keep their money and their families in the West are not eager to
badmouth the countries where their treasured assets reside. Putin’s war on
corruption -- and its crackdown on foreign bank accounts -- was meant to punish
those elites who refused to do his bidding and force them back into the fold.
UNINTENDED
CONSEQUENCES
Putin
will soon learn that pervasive corruption leads to the decay of authoritarian
regimes, but -- as the breakdown of Hosni Mubarak’s regime in Egypt
demonstrated -- it is anti-corruption campaigns that often cause their
collapse. In the absence of an ideology that secures the elites’ loyalty, the
leader can either control corruption or use it as an instrument of control; he
cannot do both.
The
signs of trouble are clearly at hand. In February, Vladimir Pekhtin, chair of
the State Duma ethics committee (and a well-known Putin loyalist), ironically
became the first high-profile victim of the declared war on corruption. After
Navalny revealed on his blog that Pekhtin had failed to declare a Miami
condominium worth several million dollars, Pekhtin was forced to vacate his
parliamentary seat. Putin had not wanted to punish the loyal Pekhtin, but he
was forced into it by his own rules. The case is illustrative: Putin cannot
decide on the targets of the anti-corruption campaign unilaterally.
Apart
from the Pekhtin episode, the Kremlin initiated a wave of anti-corruption cases
implicating various government agencies and state-owned companies. The Ministry
of Defense came first. Following an investigation, Defense Minister Anatoly
Serdyukov was sacked and questioned as a witness in a case involving illegal
sales of military-owned real estate, resulting in more than $130 million in
damages. Next up was a case of embezzlement by the Ministry for Regional
Development for the construction of facilities for the 2012 Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation summit in Vladivostok. (Former Deputy Minister Roman Panov
wound up in prison.) Soon afterward, OAO Russian Space Systems, the company
responsible for building the GLONASS satellite positioning system, found itself
at the center of a scandal when it was discovered that more than $210 million
had been transferred to fly-by-night company accounts. And just recently, the
Ministry of Agriculture, the Ministry for Regional Development, and the
Ministry of Communications have become the focus of high-profile corruption
scandals. In every case, the moral of Putin’s story is unambiguous: stealing in
exchange for loyalty remains the custom, but if the elites want to continue
enjoying their right to steal, they should repatriate their money and family to
Russia. In the case of state officials, keeping money abroad is now considered
treason.
One
major problem, however, is that the elites have nothing to gain from this new
contract. Russian history has taught them that in times of purges, nobody can
feel secure -- today’s hangmen are tomorrow’s victims. The anti-corruption
campaign will not clean up the elites, but it will purge those who are best
integrated into global business networks. The anti-corruption crusade has
shifted the power of managing the economy from relatively competent liberal
economists to managers enjoying the support of the top levels of the
law-enforcement agencies. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that what is
propagated as a war on corruption has turned into a war for power between two
or more clans of corrupt officials. For the moment, the anti-corruption
campaign has weakened the position of those closer to Prime Minister Dmitri
Medvedev -- not because they are more corrupt but because they are judged as
less loyal. Putin, meanwhile, is doomed to face the bureaucracy’s forms of
everyday resistance, such as constant delays, lost files, confused
explanations, and low-risk boycotts.
Two
factors are working to erode Putin’s power: the elite’s natural tendency to
think beyond short-term interests and Putin’s enhanced requirement of loyalty.
On the first point, elites are nervous because the legitimacy of the system is
rooted in Putin’s personal popularity, and Putin has done nothing to prepare
the system for his eventual departure. On the second, Putin has redefined
loyalty so that it now means not only supporting the Kremlin’s decisions but
also repatriating assets from abroad and fighting Putin’s critics as personal
enemies. So, although it may look like Putin is consolidating power through the
anti-corruption campaign, in reality he faces a critical moment and is at risk
of losing his sway over the elites.
A
familiar paradox to students of corruption is that the more the media writes
about corruption, the more the people perceive their country and their
government as corrupt. But it is not only this familiar dynamic that is at work
in Russia. In fact, recent surveys reveal another correlation that should
terrify the Kremlin’s spin doctors: the rise in citizen expectations about
fighting corruption leads to demands for radical political change. And although
the Kremlin hopes that the growing insecurity of the elites will make them more
obedient, a viable alternative scenario is that it will push them to seek
guarantees outside of Putin’s system. So, contrary to the Kremlin’s
expectations, the anti-corruption campaign could both weaken the loyalty of the
elites and strengthen the citizens’ demands for change. In an effort to revise
the bargain that has kept him in power for over a decade, Putin may well have
planted the seeds of his own demise.
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