U.S. Media Bias Creates False Pictures Of
Russia
By
Moon Of Alabama
December 24, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- The latest Putin bashing piece in the
New York Times is headlined:
It’s Putin’s World. We Just
Live in It.
Its economy is
sputtering and its young are frustrated, but
with America and Europe in tumult, Russia
and its leader of two decades are on a roll.
Its
first sentence already includes two
falsehoods:
Its economy, already smaller than
Italy’s, may be sputtering but, two
decades after a virtually unknown former
K.G.B. spy took power in the Kremlin on
Dec. 31, 1999, Russia and its president,
Vladimir V. Putin, have just had what
could be their best year yet.
bigger
The
NYT can claim that Russia's GDP is
smaller than Italy's because it only looked
at the nominal Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
of those countries. But nominal GDP like
nominal wages are not meaningful
comparisons. The question is how much can be
bought for each nominal unit.
Andrei Martyanov has recently
looked at
two quite comparable houses, one near Moscow
and one near Washington DC. The Russian
house costs some $93,000 while the U.S. one
is offered for $440,000:
So, let us calculate GDP created by
building these two houses in Russia and
in US. Right! As you may have guessed it
already, the United States created 4.5
times more GDP than Russia by building
comparable house in a place which, let's
be frank, is not exactly Moscow. Mind
you, that Russia builds all kinds of
real estate, from apartments to houses,
like there is no tomorrow.
...
Here is how PPP (Purchase Power Parity)
GDP works, or, rather confuses most
Western think-tank free-loaders who do
not understand that most of what they
know about the world outside is a
baloney or a caricature. Like the fact
that China's real middle class which has
incomes comparable to that of the
average US income is larger than the
whole population of the United States.
That is a good hint.
...
Now, can you scale down, or scale up,
Russia's and American economies?
Difficult still but it shows you, at
least, what all those proverbial $22
Trillion of the US GDP are worth. Not as
much as you may have thought before. Nor
is the argument that Russians do not
earn as much entirely valid. Yes, many
Russians do not earn as much and that is
ongoing problem, but, say, R60,000 which
roughly converts into $965, gets you
pretty comfortable living practically
everywhere in Russia bar some places
like Moscow or Sochi, especially if you
own you apartment--very many Russians do
and by own I mean OWN, not paying
mortgage. There is a lot of what is
going into those economic
considerations. But it has to be
understood today that nominal numbers in
USD are absolutely meaningless and, in
fact, dangerous because they create a
false sense of confidence.
The
GDP of Russia, by purchase power parity,
is
4,349,423 m$.
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The
GDP of Italy, by purchase power parity, is
2,442,768 m$.
So
it surely does not look as if Russia's
economy is "already smaller than Italy’s".
Corrected by purchase power Russia's
official GDP (PPP) is about as big as
Germany's. But even that comparison is
skewed. Russia's official GDP is chronically
underestimated as the country has a large
unofficial
economy.
It is estimated that 20-30% of all work in
Russia is done in exchange for cash and is
never officially registered or taxed.
When one considers that Russia currently has
no noticeable population growth its economy
growth is still fine. It slowed down this
year but it is certainly
not sputtering:
Economic growth in Russia will be higher
than expected in 2019 and is likely to
pick up in the next few years thanks
partly to higher state spending and
looser monetary policy, the World Bank
said on Wednesday.
...
The World Bank, in a regular report on
the Russian economy, said it expected
gross domestic product to expand by 1.2%
this year, up from the 1.0% it projected
in October. In 2018, Russian GDP grew by
2.3%.
In
2020 Russian GDP is seen at 1.6% and in
2021 1.8%, versus 1.7% and 1.8%
respectively projected in October, the
World Bank said.
Unlike the Fed and European central banks,
which have pushed interest rates to zero to
create artificial growth in unproductive
financial markets, the Russian central bank
held back and still has lots of ammunition
left. And the Russian Federation has a
very sound budget
and little debt. Should a growth spurt be
needed Russia still has, unlike others, the
economic ammunition to provide it:
"A
less restrictive monetary policy and
increased spending on the national
projects is expected to help foster
growth," Renaud Seligmann, World Bank
Country Director in the Russian
Federation, said in the report.
The central bank will next meet on
interest rates on Dec. 13, where it may
consider cutting the key rate, now at
6.5%, for the fifth time so far in 2019.
The
rest of the NYT piece is not any
better than its very first paragraph. It
simply repeats false stereotypes about Putin
as an "autocratic leader" or about the
non-existing Russian influence on U.S.
elections.
Nearly thirty years ago when the Soviet
Union broke apart Russia had a deep fall.
The liberalization of its economy had
catastrophic consequences. But it has since
reformed itself. It is now back to its
traditional position in the world. A large
Eurasian power which is in nearly all
aspects independent from the rest of the
world and able to protect itself. It must
therefore be taken into account when one
thinks of global polices. That is simply a
fact and not the effect of a "mindgame" that
Russia allegedly plays with the "west".
That the U.S. still has problems to
understand that is not Russia's fault but
the result of the skewed descriptions of it.
This article was originally published by
"Moon Of Alabama " -
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