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Ladies and gentlemen, dear friends. It’s an
honor for me to speak to this great audience. I would like to thank
especially Mr. Curtis Mack and Ms. Mary Morris for inviting me here today.
Today is an unusual meeting, accompanied my
good friend Mr Molozonov an American businessman doing business in Russia.
I suggest for the sake of saving your time that Mr.Molozonov will read my
speech in English. This way I will have more time to answer your wonderful
questions.
Slightly more than a month has elapsed since
Presidential Election Day in Russia. Vladimir Putin’s second term of office
has just begun, but it has already given rise to more expectations than ever
before.
What can be expected of the next four years a
space of time in which Russia is destined to complete the formation of its
21st century image? Classic Russian writer Nikolai Gogol viewed his country
as a fast-riding troika. This vision of Russia and the questions that Gogol
asked about it have always provided Russian and people in other countries
with ample food for thought.
“Where art thou soaring away to, Russia? Give
me an answer,” wrote Gogol in one of his epic works. I think the answer is
much clearer these days than it used to be in the past.
Let us look at the achievements of the
previous four years. In 2003, Russia showed the best economic performance
since the disintegration of the Soviet Union. We witnessed a record high
economic growth rate of at least 6.5 percent, Investment are at the highest
levers ever, and economic experts are predicting that the ruble might become
fully convertible in a few years stet time.
The country reached an important psychological
milestone last year as Russia’s per capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) got
on a level with the world’s average, a growth rate that was higher than
Europe, the United States or Japan resulted in a rebound, although one must
admit that Russia is still way behind, say, the European countries or U.S.
Sociologists indicate that the majority vote
in favor of Putin in the March 2004 election is of a totally different
quality than the majority vote that earned him the presidential mandate in
2000. The middle class rose by 50 percent and formed an active core of the
new majority, which was not the case in the elections of 2000.
Let’s take a look at the data from public
opinion polls in that context. So far, around 56 percent of the respondents
see themselves as belonging to the medium-income category and a mere one
percent of all respondents say they are rich. All the others are either
undecided or find their earnings to be too small.
There is one more fact that deserves notice.
The vast majority of low-income Russians tend to blame their woes on the
government in the first place, and on “adverse circumstances” in the second.
Those who think that none but themselves are to blame for their situation
make up only six percent of the people polled. This conviction reflects an
important historical fact for the system where a job was a “right”
guaranteed by the government, and people were paid for an imitation of work
rather than for real work done, ceased to exist but a few years ago.
One of my colleagues, a journalist, told me
once that Russia has only two problems. Number one, we are convinced that
management is an art, in fact it is a science, a set of essential governance
technologies. Second, we believe that economics is a science, while its true
essence is that of an art.
The Russian authorities have formulated a goal
of achieving a better life for the people, which does not mean, however,
that the government will commit itself to Robin-Hood tactics of taking away
wallets from the rich to make the poor better off. One of the key promises
the government has made in this respect is that there will be no alteration
in the flat 13 percent income tax rate.
Simultaneously, the government has proposed
slashing the unified social security tax (UST) rate to 26 percent from the
current 36 percent. It means that the Russian companies will be able to save
an extra 10 billion rubles, a year.
At the same time, the Cabinet of Ministers is
eyeing several additional sources of revenue. One of them is to make the oil
sector pay more in resource tax that will help replenish the budget by an
extra 6 to 10 billion rubles.
President Putin is a man of practical deeds.
He always asks others: “What do you want me to do?” On the morning after his
election day, he argued with one of his close associates. The associate had
insisted that no president could allow himself to keep all of the earlier
made promises during the first term in office because one has to think about
the next presidential campaign. “History-making work can begin only during
the second term of office,” the man said.
Vladimir Putin said he could not agree with
that postulation. He personally was not ready to work simply for what it
takes to go down in history. “We must work for the sake of the living
people, their children and grandchildren, who will live tomorrow,” the
president said. He recalled that the art of policy-making was based on
finding equilibrium between imperatives and capabilities. The real goal is
to make the nation affluent, and, in order to achieve this goal, it is
necessary to take certain steps towards modernizing the economic and social
spheres.
Back in 2003, Mr Putin voiced the idea of
doubling the GDP through boosting the global competitiveness of the Russian
economy. The idea sparked off an animated debate about which instruments
could secure the attainment of such a goal, in what ways it should be
attained, and what steps should be taken.
And the steps are being taken. In the social
arena, the government proposed paying larger pensions. If a person keeps on
working after reaching the age of 60, which is the official retirement age,
his or her pension will increase by 15 percent annually. So if a person
keeps on working for several years in succession, the pension could be twice
as much as what he or she would get upon quitting the job once they reach
the retirement age.
Russia will be pursuing a multi-vector foreign
policy that presumes cooperation with the United States, the European Union,
Asian partners, China, India, and countries of the Asia-Pacific region. Its
foreign policy, proclaimed by the president, aims to create a beneficial
external environment instead of demonstrating imperial ambitions of any
sort.
The summit of the Group of Eight
industrialized nations, due in Russia in the summer of 2006, is destined to
become a landmark event during President Putin’s second term of office. I
have no doubt that it will make clear our inseparable ties with the
community of the leading democracies.
U.S. President George W. Bush was one of the
first foreign leaders to call Mr Putin and congratulate him on his
re-election. I think it is a well-known secret that both presidents
reconfirmed their commitment to the previously agreed strategic partnership
course.
Russia and the U.S. have no differences in
their vision of the strategic tasks that humankind is facing in the field of
stability and security. As for the differences in the methods for reaching
these aims, it is a natural thing for any partnership.
Our country is facing a tough choice.
Different countries and regions of the globe are developing fast, and we
cannot afford to sit on our hands reflecting on the wealth we accumulated in
the past, pondering about our millennium-old history or resting on laurels.
President Putin has stressed the importance of making ourselves -
individuals, industries and the entire country - competitive on the global
scale. Competitiveness is our national goal, not only for the next four
years, but also for a much longer historical period.
Thank You
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