Get ready for the deluge (John Moore/Getty Images)

The Russian state is, bit by bit, squeezing out political and intellectual challenge. Alexei Navalny will, in February, complete the first year of a two-and-a-half-year sentence in the Pokrov corrective colony on charges of slander and breach of parole. His jailing removed the most active centre of protest, and the creator of the most inventive and pointed demonstrations of elite corruption in the Putin regime.
A running commentary on the criminal nature of the administration has been silenced: what is now happening is less dramatic, less easily grasped, without a dominant figure pointing to its venality.
The pressure comes in two forms. One is wholly willed by the regime, aimed at discrediting dissidence of all kinds. The other, less apparent, is a by-product of the economic and social policies of a government which has set its face against economic reform of any depth, on the grounds that it risks destabilising the form of governance which has developed under the Putin presidency.
The latter of these is the subject of an excoriating report, published at the end of last month, under the title of The Coming DelugeĀ (a reference to the remark ā āAfter us, the delugeā āĀ said to have been made, several decades before the revolution, by Louis XV of France in 1857 to his favourite, Madame de Pompadour ā or by her to him). The highly regarded commentator Andrei Kolesnikov, who with Denis Volkov wrote the report based on interviews made over the past six months with a number of leading business figures and economists, argues that āthe prevailing attitude among members of the ruling class appears to be that there is enough oil and gas to keep the state coffers full, buy votersā loyalty, and control civil society and the media for as long as the countryās current leaders are in power (until 2036, when President Vladimir Putin may at last have to step down). What comes after that does not concern them: ‘After us, the deluge.'”
The governing class, secure in their control of the rents derived from oil and gas, āare mired in inaction by feelings of complacency and a widespread reluctance to engage in any long-term strategic planning or changeā¦ Unless something drastically changes, stagnation in the broadest sense of the word ā from economic depression to social apathy ā is the only possible medium and long-term scenario for Russia.ā
One result, largely ignored by the administration, is what one respondent to the Kolesnikov report termed a pervasive āinequality of rightsā, arising from āvastly different access to healthcare, education, state services and other infrastructureā.
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