This is What Putin Wants You to Drive Photo Credit: azrainman
Russia, of course, is not the only country to rely on the price of oil for its economic wellbeing. The Arab Gulf states both rely on oil, and save and invest their earnings to guard against price drops and even the eventual exhaustion of their oil reserves. Like Venezuela, however, Russia stands accused of having squandered its petro-wealth.
The Kremlin has not invested in improving its infrastructure, capabilities or companies. There seems to have been a lot of grandstanding, military investment and either deals for the oligarchs or down-right corruption.
The generally held belief has been that Russians are prepared to accept less political freedom as long as the center is strong. The truth is probably a bit more nuanced. Vladimir Putin is trusted as a strong patriot - he is certainly trusted more than local officials, who are the symbol of the corrosive effects of corruption on daily life. Most Russians would like to see Putin come to their neck of the woods and sort things out.
Putin did just that on Thursday 4 June 2009, going to Pikalyovo, a small town close to St Petersburg, and publicly scolding a pro-government oligarch, Oleg Deripaska. This in itself is pretty unheard of, but the scale of the rebuke raised even more eyebrows. He threw a pen at him, told him he was greedy and unprofessional, and forced him to sign the contract to get his BaselCement factory, the only major employer in the town, up and running again. He also pledged over $1.5m to meet unpaid wages.
Many Russians love him for this type of behaviour - many, but not all. 500 people demonstrated in Pikalyovo, chanting 'Work work!', as their simply aren't any more jobs left. There are hundreds of such towns dotted across Russia, designed by Soviet Union central planners around single factories or large employers. If the employer shuts down, the town is crippled. They are called mono towns, and there are over 500 of them.
The Pikalyovo demonstrations might have been embarrassing, coming as they did during the St Petersburg Economic Forum, but the most volatile situation is in Russia's Far East. This is the world's biggest country, stretching nine time zones, two continents and 3,800 miles. To say East Russia isn't joining in the Putin love-fest is an understatement. There is talk of open civil war. East vs West.
It all kicked off when Putin imposed a new law to raise import duties on foreign cars. It was designed to protect the Russian car industry. "They're crap", the East retorts, and they have a point. Russian cars haven't improved much since Brezhnev's time. Everyone in the East drives Japanese imports.