Judith Matloff,
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Moscow
Economist
Alexei Vedev saw disaster coming in 1991. The Soviet Union was crumbling.
Foresight told him state subsidies would dry up - and with them his job.
So he decided to
form his own think tank.
While many academics
found themselves driving taxis or cleaning people's homes, others like
Mr. Vedev have done well thanks to a touch of free-market chutzpah.
Vedev built up an
influential client base of contacts he had cultivated at the state-run
Academy of Sciences. In time, he developed his own unit of researchers
and analysts specializing in the emerging capitalism. Now he runs a respected
economic analysis center in Moscow linked to DialogBank, a commercial bank.
"Creating my own think tank was the only way to survive", he says.
Vedev didn't know
it, but he was in the vanguard of a new growth industry springing out of
the ruins of the Soviet Union. Independent research institutes and think
tanks have sprouted like mushrooms in the 1990s.
At least 300 political-science
organizations are based in Moscow alone, many of them operating without
state support. Some are headed by scientists turned financial analysts.
Businessmen and politicians also have set up policy centers to influence
public opinion. Even former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has joined
the bandwagon, setting up his Gorbachev Foundation in 1992 after his retirement.
Observers say such
a phenomenon could only come in a country that boasts one of the world's
highest standards of education. During Communist times, the government
bankrolled thousands of academics, scientists, intellectuals, experts,
and specialists in various fields. Once the Soviet state shriveled away,
however, so did publicly funded research centers.
"A good institute
gives intellectuals prestige, access to top levels of power, and the chance
to be quoted and obtain funds," says analyst Alexei Mukhin of the independent
information center known simply as "Center."
A glance at Moscow's
telephone directory reveals a profusion of research groups so similar in
name that the public often mixes them up. But political analyst Nikolai
Petrov at the American-funded Carnegie Center says the fancy-sounding names
can be tricky. "Now prresearch groups so similar in name that the public
often mixes them up. But political analyst Nikolai Petrov at the Amer
This does not seem
to detract from the influence many think tanks wield, particularly those
with links to the government. Despite professed independence, many think-tank
experts keep close relationships with top ministers.
A case in point is
Alexei Ulyukayev, deputy director of the Gaidar Institute, run by former
Acting Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar. Mr. Ulyukayev was recently summoned
to advise the team of new Prime Minister Sergei Kiriyenko.
Russians might be
forgiven for wondering whether there is too much hot air in Moscow. With
the recent financial crisis, rampant unemployment, and millions of rubles
in wages going unpaid for months, does Russia really need so much theorizing?
Yes, thinks Mr. Gorbachev.
"Our Russian policies
need to have intellectual support," he told the Monitor. "What is happening
is an embodiment of democracy. Only free thought can help us to understand
what we are today."
Newcomers to the
think-tank scene complain the market is saturated. Financing - usually
from banks, politicians, private companies, or individuals - is ever more
elusive. Mr. Mukhin says stiffer competition might not be bad. "Do you
know why we have so many institutes?" he asks. "We have too many ex-officials.
It's too much."
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