ABSTRACT

This book presents a study of the complex relationship between the Russian state and big business during Vladimir Putin’s first two presidential terms (2000–2008). Based on extensive original research, it focuses on the interaction of Russia’s political executive with the ‘oligarchs’. It shows how Putin’s crackdown on this elite group led big business to accept new ‘rules of the game’ and how this was accompanied by the involvement of big business in policy formulation, particularly through the organisational vehicle of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs (RSPP). It goes on to discuss why Yukos and its CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky were targeted by Russia’s political authorities and the resultant consequences, namely the end of the relatively successful framework via which state-business relations had been managed, and its replacement by fear and mutual distrust, along with a vastly expanded role for the state, and state-related actors, in the Russian corporate sector. The book explores all these developments in detail and sets them against the context of continued trends towards greater authoritarianism in Russia.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|43 pages

The state reasserted

The decline of the ‘oligarchy’

chapter 4|24 pages

Putin's new ‘rules of the game’

Institutionalising Russia's business elite

chapter 5|26 pages

All the President's men

The influence of the Presidential Administration

chapter 6|38 pages

Business associations in Russia

The early Putin era

chapter 7|43 pages

The RSPP

A case study in collective lobbying

chapter 8|28 pages

The Yukos affair

Causes and motives

chapter 9|31 pages

Khodorkovsky's arrest

Russia's business elite reacts

chapter 10|11 pages

Postscript