Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewNeil Robinson has assembled an impressive group of specialists to explore the many challenges facing Russia as it searches for a sustainable development strategy. -- Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
The Political Economy of Russia offers excellent analyses of the relationships between the state, the economy, and society in the post-Soviet Russian Federation. It is a significant contribution not only to the study of Russia but to the comparativist debates on the varieties of capitalism. The book includes studies of taxation, property rights, demography, and agriculture. It shows that, far from being an 'energy superpower,' Russia belongs to the semiperiphery of the world system and that the state under Putin and Medvedev continues to play a predatory rather than a developmental role. -- Peter J. S. Duncan, University College London
This volume examines the link between the development of Russia's economic and political regimes, focusing on how the link has been influenced not only by Soviet legacies but also by the realities of energy, agricultural, and demographic conditions. This work introduced this reviewer to the concept of Russia's "political capitalist" system, a concept that will add new dimensions to class discussions. While edited volumes often suffer from uneven coverage or quality, editor Robinson (Univ. of Limerick, Ireland) avoids this problem, providing an excellent overview in the introduction, followed by a chapter that puts Russia's political economy in context. Chapter 3 ("Revenue Imperatives") starts from the premise that power inevitably finds wealth, and explains how Russia's pattern of revenue extraction influenced state-society relations. Chapter 4 ("Systemic Stalemate") expands this idea, using corporate case studies (Yukos, Toaz) to explore the tensions between developmental and predatory aspects of state intervention. Chapter 5 explores the political economy of Russia's demographic crisis, examining both state policy and societal attitudes toward immigrants and pronatalism. Chapters 6 and 7 focus on problems that agriculture and oil present to Russia's political economy. Final chapters place Russia's economy in global perspective and describe the political dysfunctions of Russian capitalism. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate through professional collections. * CHOICE *
Table of ContentsChapter 1: Introduction: The Political Problems of Russian Capitalism Neil Robinson Chapter 2: The Contexts of Russia’s Political Economy: Soviet Legacies and Post-Soviet Policies Neil Robinson Chapter 3: Revenue Imperatives: State over Market in Postcommunist Russia Gerald M. Easter Chapter 4: Systemic Stalemate: Reiderstvo and the Dual State Richard Sakwa Chapter 5: The Political Economy of Russia’s Demographic Crisis: States and Markets, Mothers and Migrants Linda J. Cook Chapter 6: Change in Agriculture: The Development of Russia’s Private Farming Stephen K. Wegren Chapter 7: Russia’s Potential Role in the World Oil System: Reciprocal Dependency, Global Integration, and Positive Unintended Consequences Andrew Barnes Chapter 8: Russia as Semiperiphery: Political Economy, the State, and Society in the Contemporary World System Paul T. Christensen Chapter 9: Conclusion: The Political Dysfunctions of Russian Capitalism Neil Robinson