Автор работы: Пользователь скрыл имя, 24 Ноября 2011 в 05:26, лекция
THERE was disbelief this week when ArkadyDvorkovich, adviser to President Dmitry Medvedev, told journalists that Russia was close to joining the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Russia has been “close” for ages, but the timing has always slipped. Yet after 18 years of talks, it seems that membership now beckons.
Russia
and world trade
In at last?
After
18 years Russia is on the verge of joining the World Trade
Organisation
Nov
5th 2011 | MOSCOW | from the print edition
THERE
was disbelief this week when ArkadyDvorkovich, adviser to President
Dmitry Medvedev, told journalists that Russia was close to joining the
World Trade Organisation (WTO). Russia has been “close” for ages,
but the timing has always slipped. Yet after 18 years of talks, it seems
that membership now beckons.
Both
America and the European Union have long agreed, as have all the other
153 WTO members bar Georgia, a small former Soviet republic which fought
a brief war with Russia in August 2008 and is still partly occupied.
Georgia had insisted, quite reasonably, on placing international observers
to monitor the movement of goods at its sovereign border, which includes
the territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
Russia,
which has recognized the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
said this compromised their status. Swiss mediators have found a deal
that does not mention their status, refers to the border as a corridor
and provides for monitoring not by a government agency but by a private
foreign company accountable to the Swiss government. Now Georgia has
said “yes”, clearing the way for Russia’s entry.
After
a few days, Russia also accepted the deal. There is no doubt that Mr
Medvedev would like to go down in history not just as somebody who tinkered
with Russian time zones but as the man who took his country into the
WTO. The final decision still lies with Vladimir Putin, Russia’s prime
minister and likely future president, though he is unlikely to block
it now.
As Vedomosti,
Russia’s business daily, points out, Mr Putin has always been the
real obstacle to Russia’s entry into the WTO. In 2009, when talks
between Russia and America were going full steam, Mr Putin unexpectedly
thwarted them by saying that Russia would join only with Belarus and
Kazakhstan, with which it has a customs union. Mr Putin, initially eager
for Russia to be in the big international clubs, has come to see some
WTO demands as a politically motivated nuisance.
The
benefits of WTO membership are debatable. Some estimate that Russia
could gain at least $50 billion a year. Others argue that Russia would
do better to stimulate exports before joining. As it is, two-thirds
of exports are oil and gas, not covered by WTO rules. Apart from extractive
industries and metal, few Russian goods are competitive. A World Bank
report notes that Russian exporters have trouble not just entering foreign
markets but surviving in them.
The real problem, however, is not trade barriers to Russia’s goods, but the country’s own inefficiency, institutionalised corruption and stifled competition. None of these problems can be solved by WTO membership. But Sergei Guriev, head of the New Economic School in Moscow, says that it would at least expose corruption and increase competition, deeply alien to Russia’s ruling bureaucracy. Indeed, the main benefit of WTO membership may be political. “It will be a sign that Russia is moving towards the civilised world,” says MrGuriev, “not away from it.”
fromtheprintedition | Europe