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A Dialogue of the Deaf: EU–Russia Economic Cooperation

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Article
Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center

A Dialogue of the Deaf: EU–Russia Economic Cooperation

Moscow’s unwillingness to trust market forces and continued insistence on top-down economic policies undermines any attempt at a true economic partnership with Europe.

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By Sergei Aleksashenko
Published on Jun 17, 2010

The fact that the EU-Russia summit in Rostov-on-Don brought no tangible results is unsurprising—the large volume of trade between the two sides should not be taken as evidence of close economic ties. In truth, the lion’s share of Russia’s export to Europe is energy and the oil and gas pipelines that carry that trade are inherited from the Soviet Union. There is not a significant flow of direct investment in either direction. What’s more, even before the summit, it was clear that the changing structure of power within the European Union would turn the summit into a “meet and greet” session, while deep disagreements over South Ossetia and Abkhazia made hopes of break-through agreements unrealistic. Indeed, the agenda proposals that the two sides brought to the table hardly overlapped at all.

Russia’s Proposals

The Russian government is continuing its rhetoric about the need for a technological modernization of Russia’s economy. The good news is that Moscow recognizes that there can be no qualitative change to the Russian economy without foreign investment. Only six months ago, this idea was taboo in government circles, but Russia’s leaders are now prepared to appeal to investors in Europe, the United States, and Asia.

The bad news, however, is that the government has no faith in market mechanisms and stimuli, relying entirely on administrative methods of economic management. As a result, all of the modernizing projects are born exclusively in the Kremlin or the Russian White House, while the key instruments of their implementation are by decree from the president or prime minister. The proposal to conclude an agreement on “Partnership for Modernization” is based on the same logic: the Russian “vertical” is meant to do a deal with the European “vertical.”

The weakness of such an approach is immediately evident. For one thing, Europe has a long way to go before it constructs a true “power vertical” and it is not at all clear that Europeans even want one. Second, while European structures do have certain administrative resources (they can, for example, find money in the European budget for various projects or agree on guarantees for investment or trade), the real locomotives of the economy are, of course, European companies, both in general and as it pertains to economic cooperation with Russia in particular.

For these companies to work more actively with Russia, they need the same thing as all other investors: rule of law, defense of property rights, and reducing corruption and bureaucratic abuse. These are the conditions (or demands) that were set out by the European leadership. It is likely that President Medvedev was quite offended to hear that, having heard exactly the same demands only a week earlier at a meeting with American venture capitalists, during which he silently ducked addressing questions on when these reforms would take place.

Europe’s Agenda

There was little innovation in Europe’s agenda for this summit. The first point—access for European companies to Russian oil and gas fields—fell on deaf ears. Despite all of the declarations about the need to attract foreign investment to Russia, the country still requires that foreigners obtain permission to invest in any of 42 strategic sectors. Additionally, any investment of more than 10 percent in any oil or gas project triggers a government review.

While the European position on investment is clear and understandable, Europe’s silence on visa-free travel (or at least a significant simplification of visa requirements)  – a demand issuing more from Russian society than from the government – is surprising. Easing the visa regime would certainly facilitate closer economic and cultural cooperation between ordinary Russian and European companies and citizens, which, in the long term, is of much more importance than cooperation among bureaucrats. The refusal to seriously discuss the issue during the summit delivered a significant blow to those Russian politicians and experts who argue for deeper dialogue and cooperation with Europe, while handing ammunition to their opponents.

Of course, it may be that the latest wave of the financial crisis—emanating, this time, from Europe’s Mediterranean south—doomed this summit to failure by proving too much of a distraction for European leaders. But it seems that the Rostov summit simply proved what we already suspected: the two sides do not share a common agenda on economic cooperation, nor are they willing to do what it would take to bring about a substantive change in the situation.

In the game of chess, the term “zugzwang” describes a situation in which any move you make would worsen your position. In the economic relationship between Europe and Russia, it would seem that both sides are caught in zugzwang.

About the Author

Sergei Aleksashenko

Former Scholar in Residence, Economic Policy Program, Moscow Center

Aleksashenko, former deputy minister of finance of the Russian Federation and former deputy governor of the Russian central bank, was a scholar-in-residence in the Carnegie Moscow Center’s Economic Policy Program.

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Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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