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McDdd's avatar

[bored yawn] Yeah, unless I'm sorely mistaken, I do believe I've heard this somewhere before, e.g. "...Russia is isolated with its economy in tatters." (https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2015/01/20/remarks-president-state-union-address-january-20-2015)

Or maybe, "...hang a sign in campaign headquarters reading, in part, “the economy, stupid.”" (https://politicaldictionary.com/words/its-the-economy-stupid/)

In any case, even more than the words of Putin himself yesterday, when he said, 《...рост носиления.》is/was the key, I was delighted to hear the immediate, spontaneous applause in reply.

It would seem Russia's economy perhaps wasn't in tatters and terminal decline when the world's first winner of a Nobel Prize by virtue of mixed ethnic background declared it was (20/01/15). Perhaps by similar extrapolation, therefore, there may be grounds to believe it is, in fact, not ALL about the economy (, stupid)?

I've said before, perhaps too many times, 'the difference between Russia and the West is that they have good politicians in Russia.' Here's a good illustration: good politicians don't limit themselves to narrow definitions of success, like the economy (alone, stupid!).

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Nakayama's avatar

China's "cooling" toward Russia is rooted in its dependency on foreign reserves to import raw materials from worldwide. Until a new supply chain is set up to import significantly more from Russia, China needs large amount of USD on hand. And don't forget most of CCP party officials have children and mistresses in USA. You know, being a CCP party official or senior government employee takes a lot (use your imaginations here, they will all be right). The sign had been clear since the beginning of the year. By the time Putin did his tornado visit, I think some agreements had been reached between Russia and China. Siberia railroad is too expensive to transport vast amount of raw materials from Russia. The Arctic shipping lane is critical to China for import from Russia. Due to Russia's autarky national policies, Russia is unlikely to buy enough from China to balance the purchase from China. It has been rumored that Russia has been dumping RMB since at least last year, if not earlier. China seems to want to keep the RMD<->USD exchange rate sticky, but China's economy suggests RMB has to devalue (at least w.r.t. USD) and that would put further pressure on China's ability to import. The one-baby policy was right, but it needs another 30 years to succeed. Yet China had foolishly given up this policy. Only a dwindling population on par with China's economy and natural resources can sustain China.

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