Putin vows to protect Russia's economy
Russians fear a return to financial chaos. The current economic uncertainty is seen as a test of Putin's authority in Russia.
Reporting from Moscow — In a nationally televised show of unruffled resolve, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin vowed today to protect an increasingly anxious country from a return to economic chaos.
Putin used a congress of his ruling United Russia party to expound on the country's financial well-being, cutting an image of a strong, self-assured and focused leader. But behind Putin's determination to maintain a smooth front lurks an uncomfortable truth: Pressure on the Russian government, and on Putin himself, is growing by the day. Today's financial uncertainty is widely regarded as the first serious challenge to Putin's dominance in Russia.
The profound importance of economic stability to Russia's financially traumatized populace is difficult to overstate. People still have fresh memories of the ruble devaluation of 1998, which sparked a run on the banks and empty shelves at the grocery store. One of the chief selling points for Putin, who came to power as president in 2000, has always been his image as a guarantor of prosperity and economic stability.
These days, however, more and more Russians are feeling the pinch. One after the next, smaller banks have been shuttered. Layoffs are roiling companies around the country. The ruble has slipped steadily against the dollar in past weeks, rattling many Russians enough to convert their rubles savings to other currencies -- or remove them from the bank altogether.
The crisis goes straight to Putin's Achilles' heel, raising the long-muttered question of whether it was keen policy, or simply the good luck of coinciding with record-breaking oil prices, that allowed him to preside over a period of growth and prosperity.
"We will do our best to prevent a recurrence of the past meltdown in our country," Putin said on Thursday.
"We are doing everything possible in order to protect the deposits of our citizens and to secure the legal interests of those who invested their own money in housing construction, so that there are no more shocks of 1991 and 1998," the prime minister added.
The government has repeatedly vowed to avoid a ruble devaluation, and Putin repeated those promises today. In fact, the prime minister suggested creating a financial center in Russia and growing the ruble into a regional currency.
But when it comes to their pocketbooks, Russians are hard to placate; they've received promises in the past and wound up losing their savings.
