So, will democracy take in Russia? Yasin, a professional economist, answers that question only in terms of probabilities and conditions.
The long national tradition is clearly authoritarian. But Russia is no longer the backward peasant society it was for most of its history. With 74 percent of Russians living in cities and towns, and with the democratic revolution destroying what Yasin calls “the foundations of the hierarchical social structures,” the only remnant of authoritarianism today resides in what is known as the “vertical of power” created by the Kremlin.
Poverty and inequality are the other major impediments, but the economic growth between 1999-2002 reduced poverty by half, to about a quarter of the population. Another halving, to 12-15 percent, is now a realistic prospect, and, in Yasin’s view, it renders Russia’s social structure potentially compatible with a stable democracy.
Of course, the pressures of the age-long Russian political culture are strong, and the habits of fear, servility, and civic passivity die very hard. Together, they may yet keep Russia “in the same old rut of low competitiveness and backwardness” it occupied for centuries.
Yet there is no reason why the tripartite formula of success--democratization, free economic system, and humanism--which Yasin holds responsible for propelling other post-authoritarian nations toward impressive achievements, cannot work in Russia. Sooner or later, people will appear who, as in the 1990s, will attempt to put this formula in practice--and finish remaking Russia into a viable, free, and modern country."
“Democracy is only beginning in Russia,” Yasin concludes. “But if there be democracy, there will be Russia as well.”
“This is slavery, not to speak one's thought.” ― Euripides, The Phoenician Women
Thursday, November 02, 2006
Leon Aron on Evgeny Yasin and the Future of Russia
Leon Aron discusses the views of the author of Will Democracy Take in Russia? in AEI Russian Outlook: