A Comparison of the Russian and Saudi
Arabian Economies
May
18, 2009, by Shinichiro Tabata
Shinichiro
Tabata wrote a paper entitled “The Influence of High Oil Prices on the
Russian Economy: Comparison with Saudi Arabia” for Eurasian Geography
and Economics (2009, Vol. 50, No. 1, pp. 75-92). It was a special issue
on Russian oil and gas, edited by Clifford Gaddy. Other contributors to
this issue include Philip Hanson, Pekka Sutela, Richard Ericson, Barry
Ickes, Michael Alexeev and others
(http://bellwether.metapress.com/content/120747/).
Tabata’s paper was a first attempt to compare the economies of the two
largest oil producers and exporters in the world. He conducted this
research in preparation for the application for ongoing Scientific
Research on Innovative Areas, “Comparative Research on Major Regional
Powers in Eurasia.”
A preliminary draft of this paper was presented at the 10th Biannual
Conference of the European Association for Comparative Economic Studies
held at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow on August 28-30, 2008.
His research was assisted by Takeru Hosoi, an associate professor at
Kokugakuin University and a young specialist on Saudi Arabian and other
Gulf economies.
Tabata concluded in his paper that in order to cope with increasing oil
export revenues, Russia has established a more liberalized and more
transparent system than its counterpart in Saudi Arabia. In Saudi
Arabia, Saudi Aramco, a state-owned company, has monopolized oil
production and export, and has transferred about 80 percent of oil
export revenues to the state budget in dollars. Thus, these oil dollars
have not flowed into the exchange markets and the Saudi riyal has been
pegged against the US dollar since 1981. Consequently, Saudi Arabia is
immune from Dutch disease and inflation rates have remained low. In
contrast, in Russia, because of the rapid appreciation of the ruble,
GDP, budget revenues and personal income converted into US dollars have
increased tremendously, while household consumption has grown due to
rises in imports. In 2007, Russia ranked third in the world after China
and Japan in terms of foreign reserves. The growth in money supply and
inflation in Russia caused by increases in interventions in the
exchange markets by monetary authorities may be viewed as a cost
associated with opting for a liberalized system.
[index]
|