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World economic report
Taking advantage of high oil prices and the competitive advantages gained by the sharp rouble devaluation of 1998, the corporate Russia has responded with vigour. Economists are forecasting that the Russian GDP could expand 7 per cent in 2003, making the economy one of the fastest-growing in the world this year. Now the private economy is growing, the rouble is stable, gold reserves are more than $60 billion, Moscow residents live better than in Prague, Warsaw and east Germany, and the main problems in the city are parking and ecology. Whatever the explanations, the results have been impressive. The real GDP grew 10 per cent in 2000, 5 per cent in 2001, 4.3 per cent in 2002 and is expected to touch 6 per cent this year. Whereas, the privatized oil companies have rationalized their assets, invested in new technology raised production, and attracted outside investors, the largely state-controlled gas sector has done little to restructure itself and has saddled itself with enormous debts. Large parts of the economy remain heavily criminalized or underground. The shares-for-loans privatization programme, which resulted in a handful of oligarchs controlling large swathes of the country’s natural resource assets, has concentrated prodigious wealth in the hands of the very few. These big financial-industrial groups have also corrupted the political, governmental, legislative, and judicial processes to their advantage making it all the harder for the state to pursue further reforms that would benefit the majority of the populations. Since 1991, the state’s role in the economy has certainly changed markedly, partly by design, but largely by default following the financial crisis of 1998. As a result of the collapse of its domestic debt market, the government has had little option but to put its public finances in order. This has forced the government to focus on how it collects and spends revenues, leading to the introduction of a flat-rate tax and some radical fiscal reform. The government’s finances have swung from a nominal budget deficit of 8.6 per cent last year. The government has load initiated, if not fully implemented, administrative and judicial reforms. A former finance minister, says that Russia’s macro-economic outlook is surprisingly durable at present but that further micro-economic reforms will be needed to sustain a longer-term recovery. A lot depends on the oil price and the remnants of devaluation. The most important micro-economic challenges will be to restructure the gas, electricity and banking sectors and to pursue effective administrative and judicial reforms. While many important reforms have been adopted, most of the reforms that will really transform Russia are still lagging behind. Cyprus remains one of the largest foreign investors, a proxy for Russian money returning to the market — and a clear sign that those who know the country best consider it a good place to put their capital again, after years of uncertainty. But other, genuinely foreign, investors are also starting to arrive. The Shell and the Exxon have both made multibillion dollar, multi-year commitments to developing oil and gas fields off Sakhalin in the Russian far East. The Ikea, Metro, Auchan and other retail groups have begun expanding fast. The Pilkington, UK-listed glass-maker, recently began work on a factory, and the Ford and the General Motors are working on car assembly plants. In 2002, the Kazakhstan’s economy continued its strong performance, despite the weak world commodity markets; the GDP growth of 9.5 per cent exceeded the 7 per cent government target. Fueled by past large investments and an improved transport infrastructure, production of crude oil and gas condensate expanded by 17.3 per cent to 47 million metric tons in 2002, resulting in a 9.8 per cent increase in industrial output (which accounts for about 30 per cent of the GDP. Growth in the manufacturing sub-sector slowed to 7.7 per cent from 14.8 per cent in 2001, mainly due to moderation in external demand. Agriculture sector output grew by 2.7 per cent, growth in the livestock sub-sector was strong, but the grain sub-sector recorded only a modest rise due to a decline in crop productivity. Construction output rose sharply by 19.3 per cent, largely as a result of rapid infrastructure development for the new capital, Astana, and rapid continued growth (at over 9 per cent) in the services sector, mainly due to large rises in transport and telecommunications.
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