Country Profile - Russia
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Case Details:
Report Code : BREP024
Report Length : 17 Pages
Period : 1980 - 2003
Organization : -
Pub Date : 2004
Teaching Note : Not Available
Countries : Russia
Industry : Diversified
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"This is a country where public institutions are weak
and where the rule of law can be used by the authorities for their own political
and economic aims."
- Roland Nash, Chief Strategist, Renaissance Capital
(a Moscow-based Investment Bank), in October 2003.
"This move (arrest of Russian oil company Yukos' CEO,
Khodorkovsky) will send a very negative signal to companies investing in or
considering investing in Russia."
- Alexander Vershbow, US Ambassador to Russia,
in October 2003.
"We are indeed talking about a cancer, a cancer that
is growing on the Russia body politic. That cancer is authoritarianism. That
cancer is a complete and total disregard for the rule of law."
- Robert Amsterdam, partner in Amsterdam & Peroff,
a Toronto-based law firm, in November 2003.
Introduction
Russia is the largest country in the world, spanning 11 time zones and covering
one-eighth of the world's land surface. It is a combination of 89 different
entities that constitute 16 autonomous republics, five autonomous regions, 10
national regions and several provinces and metropolitan cities. Despite being
hit by one crisis after the other over the decades, Russia has always managed to
emerge as a survivor. The very mention of the country's name reminds one of
communism, World War II, the Cold War and political and economic upheavals. A
majority of these economic upheavals were experienced when the country was
transforming itself from a centrally planned economy to a free market economy
after the dissolution of Soviet Union in 1991.
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The government initiated many fiscal reforms during this period to increase
revenues and to improve the economy.
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However,
difficulties in implementing these reforms and excessive dependence on
short-term borrowings led to a severe financial crisis in Russia in
1998. A drastic decline in world prices for oil and minerals (major
export earners of Russia) and the Asian financial crisis during this
period, added to the country's financial problems.
This resulted in a sharp decline in the value of its
currency (ruble ), a drastic fall in foreign direct investments (FDIs,
defaults and delays in payments on sovereign and private debts, the
breakdown of the banking system (adversely affecting commercial
transactions) and high inflation... |
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