China is Russa's Template
Aleksandr D. Zhukov,
a Russian deputy
prime minister,
praised the Chinese
Communist Party at a
meeting in Suifenhe,
China.
Like an envious
underachiever,
Vladimir V. Putin’s
party, United
Russia, is
increasingly
examining how it can
emulate the Chinese
Communist Party,
especially its skill
in shepherding China
through the
financial crisis
relatively unbowed.
United Russia’s
leaders even
convened a special
meeting this month
with senior Chinese
Communist Party
officials to hear
firsthand how they
wield power.
In truth, the
Russians express no
desire to return to
Communism as a
far-reaching
Marxist-Leninist
ideology, whether
the Soviet version
or the much
attenuated one in
Beijing. What they
admire, it seems, is
the Chinese ability
to use a one-party
system to keep tight
control over the
country while still
driving significant
economic growth.
It is a historical
turnabout that
resonates, given
that the Chinese
Communists were
inspired by the
Soviets, before the
two sides had a
lengthy rift.
For the Russians,
what matters is the
countries’ divergent
paths in recent
decades. They are
acutely aware that
even as Russia has
endured many dark
days in its
transition to a
market economy,
China appears to
have carried out a
fairly similar shift
more artfully.
The Russians also
seem almost ashamed
that their economy
is highly dependent
on oil, gas and
other natural
resources, as if
Russia were a third
world nation, while
China excels at
manufacturing
products sought by
the world.
“The accomplishments
of China’s Communist
Party in developing
its government
deserve the highest
marks,” Aleksandr D.
Zhukov, a deputy
prime minister and
senior Putin aide,
declared at the
meeting with Chinese
officials on Oct. 9
in the border city
of Suifenhe, China,
northwest of
Vladivostok. “The
practical experience
they have should be
intensely studied.”
Mr. Zhukov invited
President Hu Jintao,
general secretary of
the Chinese
Communist Party, to
United Russia’s
convention, in
November in St.
Petersburg.
The meeting in
Suifenhe capped
several months of
increased contacts
between the
political parties.
In the spring, a
high-level United
Russia delegation
visited Beijing for
several days of
talks, and United
Russia announced
that it would open
an office in Beijing
for its research
arm.
The fascination with
the Chinese
Communist Party
underscores United
Russia’s lack of a
core philosophy. The
party has functioned
largely as an arm of
Mr. Putin’s
authority, even
campaigning on the
slogan “Putin’s
Plan.” Lately, it
has championed
“Russian
Conservatism,”
without detailing
what exactly that
is.
Indeed, whether
United Russia’s
effort to learn from
the Chinese
Communist Party is
anything more than
an intellectual
exercise is an open
question.
Whatever the
motivation, Russia
in recent years has
started moving
toward the Chinese
model politically
and economically.
After the fall of
the Soviet Union in
1991, Russia plunged
into capitalism
haphazardly, selling
off many industries
and loosening
regulation. Under
Mr. Putin, the
government has
reversed course,
seizing more control
over many sectors.
Today, both
countries govern
with a potent
centralized
authority,
overseeing economies
with a mix of
private and state
industries, although
the Russians have
long seemed less
disciplined in doing
so.
Corruption is worse
in Russia than
China, according to
global indexes, and
foreign companies
generally consider
Russia’s investment
climate less
hospitable as well,
in part because of
less respect for
property rights.
Russia has also been
unable to match
China in modernizing
roads, airports,
power plants and
other
infrastructure. And
Russia is grappling
with myriad health
and social problems
that have reduced
the average life
expectancy for men
to 60. One
consequence is a
demographic crisis
that is expected to
drag down growth.
The world financial
crisis accentuated
comparisons between
the economies,
drawing attention to
Moscow’s policies.
In June, the World
Bank projected that
China’s economy
would grow by 7.2
percent in 2009,
while Russia’s would
shrink by 7.9
percent.
Politically, Russia
remains more open
than China, with
independent (though
often co-opted)
opposition parties
and more freedom of
speech. The most
obvious contrast
involves the
Internet, which is
censored in China
but not in Russia.
Even so, Mr. Putin’s
political aides have
long studied how to
move the political
system to the kind
that took root for
many decades in
countries like Japan
and Mexico, with a
de facto one-party
government under a
democratic guise,
political analysts
said. The Russians
tend to gloss over
the fact that in
many of those
countries,
long-serving ruling
parties have fallen.
The Kremlin’s
strategy was
apparent in regional
elections last week,
when United Russia
lieutenants and
government officials
used strong-arm
tactics to squeeze
out opposition
parties, according
to nonpartisan
monitoring
organizations.
United Russia won
the vast majority of
contests across the
country.
package. Among the
proposals the
committee will
tackle is, yes, the
establishment of a
new consumer
financial protection
agency.
Far behind was
the Russian
Communist Party,
which styles itself
as the successor to
the Soviet one and
has some popularity
among older people.
The Russian
Communists have also
sought to build ties
to their Chinese
brethren, but the
Chinese leadership
prefers to deal with
Mr. Putin’s party.
The regional
elections
highlighted how the
Russian government
and United Russia
have become ever
more intertwined.
State-run television
channels offer
highly favorable
coverage of the
party, and the
courts rarely if
ever rule against
it.
United Russia
leaders openly
acknowledged that
they wanted to study
how the Chinese
maintained the
correct balance
between the party
and government.
“We are interested
in the experience of
the party and
government
structures in China,
where cooperation
exists between the
ruling party and the
judicial,
legislative and
executive
authorities,”
Vladimir E.
Matkhanov, a deputy
in Russia’s
Parliament, said at
the Suifenhe
meeting, according
to a transcript.
United Russia
praises the Chinese
system without
mentioning its
repressive aspects.
And the party’s
stance also appears
to clash with
repeated
declarations by Mr.
Putin, the former
president and
current prime
minister, and
President Dmitri A.
Medvedev that Russia
needs a robust
multiparty system to
thrive.
The two endorsed the
results of Sunday’s
local elections,
despite widespread
reports of fraud,
prompting opposition
politicians to call
their words hollow.
Sergei S. Mitrokhin,
leader of Yabloko, a
liberal, pro-Western
party that was
trounced, said the
elections revealed
the Kremlin’s true
aspirations. And the
China talks made
them all the more
clear, Mr. Mitrokhin
said.
“To me, the China
meeting demonstrated
that United Russia
wants to establish a
single-party
dictatorship in
Russia, for all
time,” he said.
Throughout recent
centuries, Russia
has flirted with
both the West and
East, its identity
never quite settled,
and analysts said
that under Mr.
Putin, the political
leadership had grown
scornful of the idea
that the country had
to embrace Western
notions of democracy
or governing.
That in part stems
from the backlash
stirred in the
1990s, after the
Soviet fall, when
Russia faced
economic hardship
and political chaos,
which many Putin
supporters say the
West helped to
cause.
Dmitri Kosyrev, a
political
commentator for
Russia’s state news
agency and author of
detective novels set
in Asia, said it was
only natural that
the Kremlin would
cast its gaze to the
East.
“When they
discovered that
there was a way to
reform a formally
socialist nation
into something much
better and more
efficient, of course
they would take
note,” Mr. Kosyrev
said. “Everyone here
sees China as the
model, because
Russia is not the
model.”