Eastern Oregon Bear said:Even if Ukraine is an economic boogeyman squandering it's natural resources and business potential, it's still not a justification for Russia's invasion of the Ukraine.Cal88 said:tequila4kapp said:Perhaps your Ukraine economic question is answered in the same post. The most advanced Russian/USSR partner is poorest European country.Cal88 said:golden sloth said:I think it is also worth noting that the countries most supportive of Ukraine (the former Soviet bloc countries like Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, etc.) are all united in fear of Russia. The USA is a far greater power than both Mexico and Canada, but they do not fear the US the same way the former Soviet bloc fears Russia. With exception to Belarus, why do they all choose to turn away from Russia? Is it because they know what life under Russian domination is and they choose the alternative? Why don't they trust Russia?oski003 said:sycasey said:oski003 said:
With that being said, I am not saying that Russia's invasion in Ukraine is justified because they are fighting Nazis. I am saying that Ukraine is an ethnically diverse country and the entire country did not revolt in the Maidan Revolution. It was driven from the West.
It was driven by people in Ukraine who would much rather be part of the West than remain within Russia's sphere of influence. No doubt the West encouraged it, but it was mostly coming from within Ukraine.
That's fair.
You're conflating Russia with the Soviet Union, which a lot of people in EE also do. Countries like Poland and Ukraine would be better off adopting the old Finnish model of neutrality/independence and maintaining economic relationships with both the EU and Russia, especially Ukraine, which has a large industrial infrastructure that was already set up to supply the Russian market, and was the hub for Russian natural gas. This, along with its soviet era nuclear energy, could have positioned Ukraine as the lowest cost manufacturer in Europe, leader in both labor and energy costs on the continent.
Instead Ukraine has never moved past the post-communist neoliberal oligarch corruption stage. That's the reason it went from the richest, most advanced and industrialized state in the USSR to the poorest, most corrupt country in Europe, with a GDP per capita 3 times lower than Russia's. Its industrial infrastructure has been left to rot, and its huge resources have been sold off to western multinationals by local oligarchs. These multinationals benefit from Ukraine staying in a 3rd world-like economic climate, not unlike many countries in the third world that are being exploited, buying assets for pennies on the dollar.https://theecologist.org/2014/sep/11/ukraine-opens-monsanto-land-grabs-and-gmosQuote:
Ukraine opens up for Monsanto, land grabs and GMOs
[url=https://theecologist.org/profile/joyce-nelson][/url]Joyce Nelson
11th September 2014
Dying for GMOs? One of 35 members of the neo-nazi Aidar Battalion killed in an ambush by rebels in East Ukraine, 6 September 2014. Photo: Colonel Cassad.
Hidden from mainstream media exposure, the World Bank and IMF loan has opened up Ukraine to major corporate inroads, writes Joyce Nelson. Loan conditions are forcing the deeply indebted country to open up to GMO crops, and lift the ban on private sector land ownership. US corporations are jubilant at the 'goldmine' that awaits them.
https://www.oaklandinstitute.org/sites/oaklandinstitute.org/files/Brief_CorporateTakeovero***raine_0.pdf
You also appear to miss the part where Russia's neighbors choose to keep Russia at arms length either politically or economically precisely because Russia isn't trustworthy, as demonstrated most recently by their actions in Ukraine.
Ukraine's economic problems are not a Soviet problem, they're a Ukrainian corruption problem, that country being the most corrupt in Europe, much more so than other former Soviet or eastern block countries.
Kazakhstan, former soviet state, has a higher GDP than Ukraine, with less than half the population. Belarus which is an authoritarian country and also a former Soviet state is also significantly richer than Ukraine.
Ukraine's GDP per capita is below that of El Salvador,, Guatemala and Jamaica, just above that of Egypt and Namibia. Here's a country that started out with one of the best power grids in Europe including some of the largest nuclear powerplants, lots of heavy industry, steel, metals, shipyards and advanced tech like rocket factories and aerospace industry (Antonov, Motorsich etc), and now its economy registers below that of El Salvador...
Ukraine is a very rich country that has been sucked dry of all of its resources and its industry has been left to rot, and that was before any fighting started. Russia was in the same boat in the 1990s, but has since then turned the corner with Putin reigning in his oligarchs and making large infrastructure investments, as well as reforms like the nationalization of all oil and gas and other sectors, payment of national debt (vs Ukraine being subjugated to crippling IMF loan sharking and stripping of its national assets and resources).
Russia today has a large national fund and has accumulated large gold and currency reserves (though about a third are being seized by the EU and US). Ukrainian leaders like Zelensky or Poroshenko have been more interested in their billion dollar fortunes than in reigning in their national debt.
Russia is set to pass Germany as the world's 5th largest economy PPP later this decade. It has turned from a wheat importer in the 1990s to the world's largest wheat exporter, becoming the global market leader, position it used to have early in the 20th century before the Bolshevik Revolution destroyed its farms and economy.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-02-16/russia-is-exporting-more-wheat-than-any-country-in-25-yearshttps://www.world-grain.com/articles/16273-the-fall-and-rise-of-russian-wheatQuote:
"When you look at the last two decades, Russia has shown such impressive growth," Stefan Vogel, global sector strategist for grain and oilseeds at Rabobank, told World Grain. "You look at the acreage changes; they've gone up 30% to 50% for many of the grain crops such as wheat and sunflower seed. Production has grown three times more than it was. Wheat production nowadays is 150% above where it was 20 years ago. It's been impressive to see how much this country was able to scale up production."
The first year of the 21st century, Russia exported a modest 696,000 tonnes of wheat. Ten years later, having made tremendous inroads into Asian, Middle East and African markets, Russia increased that total to 18.5 million tonnes. ...In 2012, Russian President Vladimir Putin boldly stated that Russia would double its grain exports by 2020. By 2018, Russia more than doubled that total when it exported a jaw-dropping 41.4 million tonnes of wheat, which still stands as a record
Russia made large investments into its infrastructure, ports, railroads, highways and airports. Its airports today are more modern than those in the US. It's also building up its domestic passenger jet industry with homegrown modern engines, set to enter the global market and compete with Boeing and Airbus.
Russia is going to corner other markets like it cornered the wheat market due to the fact that they have the lowest energy costs in the world today, they are going to be able to export their oil and gas indirectly through the production of energy-intensive products like metals (steel, aluminum etc), cement, paper etc., which they are able to produce domestically from raw material extraction to the final product.
Moscow and St Petersburg are first-world cities, modern large metropoles that are cleaner and safer than Paris or London.
Ukraine is the largest and wealthiest country in Europe by far in terms of its natural resources, agricultural potential, energy grid, heavy industries and tech (aerospace). Other than software/IT outsourcing, a small sector that has done relatively well, its economy has been driven into the ground by its corrupt leaders/oligarchs, while most eastern European and former soviet republics (including Russia) have done far better.
I asked Cal88 this question earlier in the thread: how does any of this justify Russia invading Ukraine? He didn't answer directly, though given that he's spent most of his time telling us how bad Ukraine is and how great Russia is, I think I know what his opinion is.